Because they were fed very little - and nowhere near enough. If you had to live on a concentration camp diet you, too, would be starving ...
they did not want to spend the money and effort of people that they did not consider worthy.
The SS and Nazis at the camps were fed like kings, the Jews were fed with 25g of bread and 100ml of fluid.
Jews are not animals, they feed themselves like any other human being. In fact, they even have unique styles of cuisine which match their dietary restrictions. Jews have mealtimes at the same general time as non-Jews (breakfast, lunch, and dinner). If, perhaps, this question was referring to when Jews were fed in Concentration Camps, where Jews were deprived of the ability and resources to make their own food, please see the Related Question below.
A labor camp was basically a sort of special prison where inmates were forced to do hard labor."Concentration camp" is the larger umbrella term for all Nazi-run camps (the term actually predates Nazism). Subtypes of concentration camps include labor camps, transit camps (where inmates are collected and transferred elsewhere), prisoner of war camps (where captured enemy soldiers were kept) and extermination or death camps (where inmates were simply killed).
They got fed sloppy porridge everyday and when they were lucky they got fed mushed up peas !!!!!Gross OR What?
Basically three times a day, but what they were fed depended on what type of prisoner they were. For example Jews would only get anything close to food once a day and flavoured water on the other occasions.
The SS and Nazis at the camps were fed like kings, the Jews were fed with 25g of bread and 100ml of fluid.
yes
They put the Jews in a "shower" naked and kept the clothes, after having other Jews who dug their graves bury them.They burned there bodies and killed the children and mothers and fed them very little .
The Jews were tricked by the Nazi Germans. The Jews and the general populace of Germany bought all the lies the Nazi Germans fed them about the Jews and the concentration camps. Most Germans believed the death camps were work camps and war manufacturing places - they are the ones who lived in denial because they feared for their lives and rightly so. They knew they were not labor camps. You could smell the stink of death from more than a mile a way. They knew. Many Jews escaped or fled to the forests in various countries. Some managed to make it to the US and the presidential cabinet heard the horrid truth about the concentration camps.
Jews are not animals, they feed themselves like any other human being. In fact, they even have unique styles of cuisine which match their dietary restrictions. Jews have mealtimes at the same general time as non-Jews (breakfast, lunch, and dinner). If, perhaps, this question was referring to when Jews were fed in Concentration Camps, where Jews were deprived of the ability and resources to make their own food, please see the Related Question below.
harsh. The captured Jews got fed small amounts they had to work hard and they were mostly killed and its was disgusting and very unsafe and i would imagine very uncomfortable.
They fed some, those who were in the camps, but they did not feed them enough to sustain life.
Allied forces invaded Europe and the Nazis had to retreat and desert the concentration camps us troops fed and cared for the prisoners
He captured them and put them in concentration camps. He forced them into long hours of slave labor and fed them almost nothing. He did brutal, torturous experiments on live Jews. He killed 6000000 of them, sending them through gas chambers like an assembly line.
No. They should be fed.
Horrible. They were cramped, not fed often, shot, the bodies were left to rot, oh...and the ovens. They burned people to death in ovens. *shivers*
A labor camp was basically a sort of special prison where inmates were forced to do hard labor."Concentration camp" is the larger umbrella term for all Nazi-run camps (the term actually predates Nazism). Subtypes of concentration camps include labor camps, transit camps (where inmates are collected and transferred elsewhere), prisoner of war camps (where captured enemy soldiers were kept) and extermination or death camps (where inmates were simply killed).