No.
The question aludes to a popular misconception; in most death camps women and children were put into rooms which were made to look like showers, but were not.
The actual showers were used, but children had no place in a death camp, only adults would work there.
Auschwitz as ever is a slightly different story, people who arrived did go to the showers upon arrival and those going into the family camp may have women and children showering together, but there were very few of these.
In concentration camps, since men and women were separated, young children were put in the women's section. However, if the concentration camps were also extermination camps, the children were often murdered upon arrival.
They were gassed as soon as practical after arrival at the death camps.
liquidated
women and children were put together and men were sepperated from them
No, kids were only at women's camps, at extermination camps, or in a few cases at concentration camps for children and young people.
What the people did in the minning camps was, Gather to collect gold, and as for the women and children, they cooked and ect.
More than 28000 Afrikaner women and children died in the concentration camps
From the books that I have read, and what I learnt at school yes.
The NAZI's used Gas Chambers in extermination/ death camps. The prisoners were shipped the camps and crammed into chambers, which they were tricked to believe were showers. The gas was released and by the time they realized what was going on, it was too late. They all suffered and died by falling and piling on top of each other. Women and children (infants as well) were kept together. Men were put in another chamber, with the strongest saved and used for labor.
to have them incinerated and to have them work the women and children were killed and the men were put to work.
For exterminating the Jewish people. It was the largest of all of the death camps that were set up before and during World War 2. Millions of innocent men, women and children were murdered in this horrible place.
The Jewish women were allowed to : 1. Stay home and care for babies and young children 2. Cook 3. Clean 4. Work (if healthy enough) This is, of course, before Jews were sent to labor, concentration, and death camps.