There was mostly thin soups, sometimes with spare veggies and potatoes, along with some bread and occasionally black coffee. Sometimes bread and some jam.
Anything they could obtain, since the alloted ration guaranteed death by starvation. ___ The usual food was thin soup with some added cereal or potato and sometimes cabbage.
my friend said they ate meat like lamb and drank wine or water
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Your friend either knows not whereof he speaks or else is pulling your chain. Either way,
you fell for it, and now he has you going forth proclaiming his nonsense for him.
The Jews in the concentration camps ate what their captors gave them. I can
assure you that it was not lamb or wine, that it didn't meet the requirements of
the USDA food pyramid, and that it seldom included the bulk, nutritional balance,
or caloric content required for life with adequate immunity to Infectious Diseases,
freedom from deficiency diseases, and stable healthy weight.
Next time you see your friend, please ask what he thinks of my opinion, in contrast
to the one he has already put over on you.
Answer:The caloric amount given to concentration camp inmates was anywhere from less than one-quarter of what the body needs, to about half. This is why hundreds of thousands died of starvation. See the attached Related Links for a tiny sampling of the eyewitness accounts.
A Halocaust Survivor names Anatole Kurdsjuk came to my school and he talked about the kind of food he ate everyday. He claimed he ate a rotten piece of bread filled with sawdust (to help fight the feeling of hunger) and a dirty glass of some type of liquid that he didn't really know. He said that every so often, if he was lucky, he would get a boiled potato.
The food they handed out was meatless pure soup,stale black bread,and cold coffee in the mournings.Most of the time it wasn't enough to live by and they didn't get fed everyday.
Gruel mad out of oats and hot water sorta like oatmeal
well usually the would have one piece of bread and some water daily but sometimes they would have nothing at all and have to try and make it through the day working there buts off!
bad foodd
Usually things un substancial like rice.
They ate the leftover food.
Yes, prisoners at the Flossenbürg concentration camp were tattooed. In many concentration camps, including Flossenbürg, prisoners were marked with a series of numbers as a means of identification. These tattoos were typically placed on the prisoner's forearm.
Prisoners at Flossenburg wore what prisoners in other concentration camps wore; striped uniforms.
they didn't, not even close.
Concentration camps were used for forced prison labor, while extermination camps were built to kill all prisoners.
Until they died or freed.
Croatian Association of Prisoners in Serbian Concentration Camps was created in 1995.
Able bodied prisoners had to work as slave labourers.
Hard physical labor.
No, there was no such thing as a "good" concentration camp!
allied forces arrived at the camps and freed the prisoners
Death camps were built to kill prisoners systematically
prisoners the free and camps consentration the enter us the did year what 1945
they wore striped pajamas
Agriculture and crafts
Yes, prisoners at the Flossenbürg concentration camp were tattooed. In many concentration camps, including Flossenbürg, prisoners were marked with a series of numbers as a means of identification. These tattoos were typically placed on the prisoner's forearm.
Prisoners at Flossenburg wore what prisoners in other concentration camps wore; striped uniforms.
Concentration Camps Were Widely Known For Exterminating Jewish Kind And Prisoners of War. Used in WWII By Nazis.