they are called natzi's
=== === They called them Konzentrationslager.
No, the Nazis did not call the SS men who worked in the Concentration Camps babies. They would never do that since they were the most severe, powerful and deadly men in the Nazi Forces. Most did not even know about the concentration camps except those high up in leadership, Himmler, the workers of the camps and the people who lived around the camps knew of them.
The term concentration camp (Konzentrationslager) was used already in March 1933.
Roll call area inside concentration, labor and death camps
The Lakota that I know call them "Death Camps," American's call them "Reservations," the Nazi's called them "Internment Camps" or "Concentration Camps." They all mean the same thing in actual practice, though the description by official sources change.
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.
Most people who "worked" in the concentration camps lived (if you can call it living) in the camp. People were shipped all across Europe to different camps. Sometimes they could be close to where they used to live, but more often than not they would simple be shipped like cattle to a camp that needed work. Where they would normally live out their remaining weeks/months/years and die a horrible death. Hope this helps you out. Was slightly confused by the question itself. Wasn't sure if you meant did they use to live close to the camp or if they were shipped in daily.
Any concentration camp gets its name from the notion that the 'undesirables' are concentrated within a perimeter, often a camp or an encampment.
It was essentially like being “drafted” to go to a concentration camp - it wasn’t optional. If you didn’t respond to the call-up, Hitler’s military organization (the SS) would come to your home to collect you bring you there. It was effectively a death sentence, since the “work camps” they were being sent to were so terrible.
Margot, Anne's sister got a call-up. A call-up is something in which leads to being sent to concentration camps.
The functions of concentration camps expanded during the Nazi period. At first, they were horrific punishment camps to deter opponents. Later the SS (which ran the camps) set itself up in the business of making money by providing slave labour for German industry, and from 1941 about 5-8 camps were used as killing centres for genocide. Please see the related question(s).A criterion often used for deciding whether a camp was a concentration or extermination camp on the one hand, or some other kind of camp on the other, was: Who ran it? Concentration camps and extermination camps were run by the SS. Other camps were run by various agencies.Please see the related questions below.
Unfortunately, there were dozens upon dozens of death camps, or concentration camps as the Nazis preferred to call them. However, they were all centered in Germany and Poland. Poland was primarily where the camps were because that was basically 'Jew central'. It was also the first country in the war to be invaded and conquered.