Given the widely known facts regarding the Holocaust and, for example, the fact that well over 1,000,000 Jews were murdered in Auschwitz, it is quite disturbing that such a question could be asked. However the question was asked and Auschwitz gives the answer.
The end of the holocaust also meant the end of the concentration camps. Obviously, most of the surviving inmates were in very poor health, and the Allies did what they could to nurse them back to health. In camps like Bergen-Belsen, where typhus was rampant when the camp was liberated, many died of disease after liberation ... Even when restored to health, some former prisoners were uanble to go home and were put in Displaced Persons' (DP) camps. For example, Jews were still not welcome in some East European countries, even after the Holocaust.
Concentration camps were very common during and before the Holocaust.
There were concentration camps in the Holocaust. The concentration camps were basically work/death camps.
concentration camps.
Concentration camps
around 8 million families were sent to concentration camps in the holocaust and in which few made it out alive. ____ The number of individuals sent to concentration and extermination camps was lower than this ...
Concentration camps were very common during and before the Holocaust.
There were concentration camps in the Holocaust. The concentration camps were basically work/death camps.
Very few Nazis were sent to concentration camps unless they got into exceptionally serious trouble with the regime.
A prisoner in charge at the camps (concentration camps, death camps, forced labor camps) during the Holocaust. These people were typically non-Jewish (Jews were treated the worst in the camps).
They would have been killed treated inhumane or sent to concentration camps.
concentration camps.
Concentration camps
nothing
concentration camps or death camps
There were concentration camps in the Holocaust. The concentration camps were basically work/death camps.
See related link.
Mainly to murder Jews.