usually what ever they could find. many were too poor to buy, so had to steal, and many people with children sent the children to steal. but there were many illegal soup kitchens in the ghetto's, where every person there got a piece of bread and a bowl of soup. if Nazi's found these, they would kill everyone there.
Almost nothing.
They eat rats if they caught them.
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Most starved to death
not alot, there was much starvation in the ghetto.
they eat soup but the soup is 95% water
Sadly, there was no kosher food.
well. not much just bread and water
It is unknown, but most people think that it's wheat bread.
it depended on what concentration camp. most of the time you got crackers or cheese or butter.
good food
Concentration camps refer to enclosures that detained political prisoners or criminals. The basic objective was to retain these people within manned limits and exploit their services. However, the term was made rather unpopular during World War II, when Adolf Hitler had 20,000 such camps established in and around Europe. The compelling restraint and torture that the prisoners had to endure associated the term with Nazi anti-Semitic propaganda and death. During the Second World War, they were specially built by the Nazi dictator to imprison millions of victims from German occupied territories. The camps induced forced labor and served as transit stations for military and allied activity. - Life was hard because everyday thousands of people were killed, tortured and were experimented on. Every day in the concentration camps people never knew if they were going to be tortured and or killed this made life a risk. They also had very little to eat or nothing to, and got very sick. - Executions were commonplace, and most inmates of the camps were simply worked to death. It wasn't until later, however, that the camps came to be associated with Jews. The death camps, on the other hand, were intended only for the Jews from the beginning; these were the camps the Nazis created in order to exterminate them.
The Jews were treated horribly in concentration camps. Often times they would be shot if they were not working hard enough, sometimes they were made to dig a grave and then they were shot and buried in it. The Jewish people had to do a variety of horrible jobs and they were to be done when they were to be done. If you had something to say about it you would have been shot. Men, women, and children lived in their barracks didn't get much to eat and if they survived their fitness check up and went to do the labor work and not be gassed then they would be worked to the bone and when they were no longer healthy they would be killed.
1.they had to work 2.for eat they was only bread and water.
Mainly bread.
It is unknown, but most people think that it's wheat bread.
it depended on what concentration camp. most of the time you got crackers or cheese or butter.
good food
No, Nazi's did not eat babies/infants or children. There was mass starvation of Jews, so babies and children would have died from malnutritition. Children were put into concentration camps, or killed with their parents.
while the jew were in the consentration camps the ate gross food.
Those who lived at home would eat at home, though they may have had some as soon as they got it. Those in camps would generally have their food taken to them.
By 1942, the Germans had built 6 death camps. Some of theses death camps were Auschwitz, Belzec, Chelmno, Majdanek, Sobibor, and T.II. Some other Concentration camps were Bergen-Belsen, Buchenwald, Dachau, Sachsenhausen, Treblinka, and Theresienstadt. These camps were forced work camps and not killing camps. The worst death camp out of them all was Auschwitz.
First off. You need to learn how to spell correctly. And second off, they wore nothing in concentration camps. They made make-shift clothes out of pubic hair and dried urine. It was a loose-loose situation for the Jews. When they were in hiding they did these things: eat drink sleep
First, for the purposes of this question, I am narrowing the analysis to Jews who keep kosher, e.g. follow the dietary laws, and also ignoring any personal allergies.Being on a train has no effect on a what a Jew can or cannot eat. Jews eat the same food on trains that they do in their homes or restaurants (except they may opt for particular dishes that are easier to transport like sandwiches over stews).If by "the trains" you are referring to the cattle cars used to transport Jews in miserable conditions to the Nazi Concentration Camps, Jews were not given food for the ride. They were "expected" to tough it out or die.
Concentration camps refer to enclosures that detained political prisoners or criminals. The basic objective was to retain these people within manned limits and exploit their services. However, the term was made rather unpopular during World War II, when Adolf Hitler had 20,000 such camps established in and around Europe. The compelling restraint and torture that the prisoners had to endure associated the term with Nazi anti-Semitic propaganda and death. During the Second World War, they were specially built by the Nazi dictator to imprison millions of victims from German occupied territories. The camps induced forced labor and served as transit stations for military and allied activity. - Life was hard because everyday thousands of people were killed, tortured and were experimented on. Every day in the concentration camps people never knew if they were going to be tortured and or killed this made life a risk. They also had very little to eat or nothing to, and got very sick. - Executions were commonplace, and most inmates of the camps were simply worked to death. It wasn't until later, however, that the camps came to be associated with Jews. The death camps, on the other hand, were intended only for the Jews from the beginning; these were the camps the Nazis created in order to exterminate them.