During the day they had to work as slave labourers.
Just pure determination.
the biggest is the extermination of a race/religion their main goal was to exterminate Jews. Another is concentration camps. they were hell on earth. hundreds of people died each day in concentration camps.
they were sent to concentration camps and slaughtered like animals.
No one, concentration camps were never and have never been stopped. This may be a reference to Schindler, he employed Jews in his factory, but it did not keep them out of a concentration camp, when the ghetto was cleared, they went to the concentration camp with everyone else, to walk to the factory to work every day.
So the Nazis could kill more Jews each day. Some extermination camps killed between 3,000-5,000 Jews every day, and then burned the bodies.
Treblinka had the highest number of murders per day. But many had a death rate of over 99%.
In concentration camps. He had people killed by the thousands every day in concentration camps throughout Europe. You should read a book called "Night" by Eliezer Wiesel. **************************************************************************** You're stretching it a bit by saying, "He (Hitler) had people killed by the thousands everyday in concentration camps through out Europe." Of course people died in all the camps but there were only three camps in which people including the Jews were "killed" and all three were in Poland.
Life in concentration camps was horrible. In the mornings you stood for around 5 hours for Appel, roll call, before going to work for the day. Along with that, they always lived in constant fear.
He was taken to the concentration camps on 1930
He increased his killing capacity of Jews by converting several concentration camps into death camps. At their peak killing capacity, all the death camps combined were killing an estimated 30,000-40,000 Jews, homosexuals, gypsies, etc., each day.
As a military operation, D Day in 1944 marked the united offensive against Germany by the Allies. For Jews, it marked the turning point of the war, and the eventual liberation of the concentration camps in which 6 million Jews were murdered.
None. The burning was the cremation of corpses. There were many methods of killing Jews, burning to death was not one of them. There were of course isolated incidents of people dying in this way, but it was not a daily occurrence.