Well liberated POW's, or soldiers, were returned to their home country after receiving basic medical treatment so they would survive the trip home.
I'm not sure what happened to gypsies and Blacks, but I imagine they were relocated to Allied countries like France and the US.
Jews were relocated to Israel shortly after the war.
Just before the end of the second world war the Nazis tried to burn down the concentration camps so that there would be no evidence of what they did. This was not done very successfully as you can still go and visit some of the concentration camps such as Auschwitz.
It is estimated that about 1.5 million Jews were left in Europe at the end of World War II. About 50,000 were interned at the end of the war. Many had escaped when the Nazis abandoned the camps.
Atomic bombs were used in the last weeks of world war 2.And in the cold war pretty much all of the war was fought with nuclear weapons.Not only did world war 2 had concentration camps but the soviet union invented communist jails and communist camps called gulag camps that were as Painful as concentration,labour,extermenation and transit camps.
Several hundred thousand German soldiers didn't want them to.
liberationThe concentration camps were liberated by the allies. At that time the Russians were part of the allied forces, but when they "liberated" the concentration camps, it was done with the rampant killing of some of the survivors. Other liberators were humane in their treatment of those who were still waiting to be freed. One interesting but tragic note is that Burgen Beltzen was liberated only three weeks after Anne Frank died. What could the world have been told if only the liberation had taken place a month earlier. This little girl's voice is still crying out to us over 60 years later, "I still believe there is basic good in everyone." I'm sorry dear Anne, but after living 65 years and seeing so much hatred and savagery, I respectfully disagree.
The Allies liberated many Nazi and Axis concentration camps in World War Two.The prisoners of war were sent to concentration camps.
The Allied army that first entered a death camp (extermination camp) was the Soviet Army, which liberated Majdanek in July, 1944. The existence of extermination camps had been known before that, however. Death Camps! Every Allied army liberated death camps. They existed in Germany, Poland and Czechoslovakia. Most of the German camps, Buchenwald, Dachau and others were liberated by the French and Americans, while Auschwitz and Theresianstadt were liberated by the Russians. Their existence were only known since 1943, two years before their liberation.
No. The Jews were saved and liberated from the concentration camps after the British, the Americans and the USSR defeated the Nazis and their allies.
Auschwitz, the most infamous of the camps, has been maintained as a memorial.
Just before the end of the second world war the Nazis tried to burn down the concentration camps so that there would be no evidence of what they did. This was not done very successfully as you can still go and visit some of the concentration camps such as Auschwitz.
They were relocated by the US gov to camps called war relocation camps.
It is estimated that about 1.5 million Jews were left in Europe at the end of World War II. About 50,000 were interned at the end of the war. Many had escaped when the Nazis abandoned the camps.
Atomic bombs were used in the last weeks of world war 2.And in the cold war pretty much all of the war was fought with nuclear weapons.Not only did world war 2 had concentration camps but the soviet union invented communist jails and communist camps called gulag camps that were as Painful as concentration,labour,extermenation and transit camps.
Several hundred thousand German soldiers didn't want them to.
they got taken to consentration camps
liberationThe concentration camps were liberated by the allies. At that time the Russians were part of the allied forces, but when they "liberated" the concentration camps, it was done with the rampant killing of some of the survivors. Other liberators were humane in their treatment of those who were still waiting to be freed. One interesting but tragic note is that Burgen Beltzen was liberated only three weeks after Anne Frank died. What could the world have been told if only the liberation had taken place a month earlier. This little girl's voice is still crying out to us over 60 years later, "I still believe there is basic good in everyone." I'm sorry dear Anne, but after living 65 years and seeing so much hatred and savagery, I respectfully disagree.
Japanese - American citizens were forcibly compelled to go to internment camps which were essentially the same thing as concentration camps .