It was possible that the Jewish people would be able to see other members of their family from time to time. But if you mean they were allowed to be with each other then the answer is no. The men and the women were seperated also and usually the only way they saw each other was through a fence.
Yes some were because some families was able to hide them, or they escape the country but most of them were cauht and had to go to this concentrarion camps
When train loads of Jews arrived at Auschwitz, SS doctors 'selected' able-bodied Jews for work - and the old, the young and visibly pregnant women were sent straight off to be gassed.
In 1939 most German Jews were forced to relocate to designated Jewish apartment blocks with a huge J over all entrances. Most young, able-bodied Jews were sent to labour camps. When the Nazis seized Poland the Jews were forced to live in ghettos, where the conditions were atrocious.
I don't think so, probably only if they could work. Mostly, they were killed.Added: Yes, even children were sent to the Concentration Camps - reason being is that the people being sent there thought they were only going to work camps and didn't know they were going to be killed. The Nazi's feared that if the children were forcibly removed from the parents prior to their reaching the camps, there would be rioting among the Jews, et al, that even they wouldn't be able to suppress. So entire families were sent to the camps so that the children could be removed from the parents under tightly controlled and secure conditions.
Able bodied prisoners had to work as slave labourers.
putting them in concetration camps
for the same reason that prisons were able to happen, they were built to hold criminals.
The liberation of the concentration camps did not impact WW2 at all. POW camps and slave labour camps were also liberated, servicemen were able to return to their units, but that was the limit of the impact.
Jews, criminals, homosexuals, gypsies, little people, the mentally ill and many others were imprisoned and killed in concentration camps. Only a few able-bodied people were kept at death camps, so as to do all of the work required at a death camp. Everyone else taken to a death camp was killed.
Some survivors of the concentration camps camps were able to go home. However, many did not wish to or were unable to do so. (For example, there was violence against the Jews in Poland in 1945-46). These survivors had to go instead to Displaced Persons Camp initially. Later they found new homes and by the end of 1951 all the camps for Displaced Persons (except one) were dissolved.
Unlikely, as whilst the US was still neutral they were able to extradite their citizens from the concentration camps. If they were still in Germany after all of the warnings in the 1930's something was going wrong.
The Jews were relieved and finally able to get on the train to leave Sighet because they were being deported to a supposedly safer location. They believed they were going to a place where they would be spared the atrocities of the Holocaust, not knowing the true horrors that awaited them at the concentration camps.