They followed some miles behind the front line looking for those types of people who were seen as a threat to security.
They were called Einsatgruppen (or SD-Einsatgruppen). In English they are often referred to as mobile killing units.
yes _______ No, they were generally led by the guards from the prison camps.
The Holocaust
The Holocaust. :)
holocaust
You may be thinking of the Einsatzgruppen (mobile killing units), which carried out the early stages of the Holocaust.There was no Nazi police force devoted solely to 'dealing with the Jews'.
The Nazi German blessed the typhus. It was less work for them at killing the prisioners.
1945 was when the nazi holocaust was exposed
Auschwitz (the largest Holocaust killing centre). Adolf Hitler (the Nazi leader) Adolf Eichmann (the Nazi who organized the transport for Holocaust perpetration) Anti-Semitism (prejudice or discrimination against Semites, Jews) Atrocity (an act which is illegal by international law)
They were the SD-Einsatzgruppen.
The Einsatzgruppen, mobile killing units responsible for mass shootings of Jews and other targeted groups during the Holocaust, effectively ended with the defeat of Nazi Germany in 1945. As the war progressed and the Allies advanced, many members of these units were either captured, killed, or fled. Additionally, the shift in Nazi strategy towards more centralized extermination methods, such as the use of extermination camps, contributed to the decline of their operations. After the war, several Einsatzgruppen leaders were tried and convicted at the Nuremberg Trials for their war crimes.
During the Holocaust, the Nazi regime systematically murdered children, primarily through mass shootings and in extermination camps. Einsatzgruppen, mobile killing units, often rounded up children along with their families and executed them at mass graves. In extermination camps, such as Auschwitz, children were subjected to inhumane conditions, medical experiments, and gas chambers designed for mass killings. The genocide targeted Jewish children and those from other groups deemed undesirable, resulting in the deaths of approximately 1.5 million Jewish children alone.