most were confiscated
pennies
Nazi concentration camps are usually holding spots for Jews or Gypsies to kill them. There also used as camps to do things for the Nazis, such as grow things, or even build items. They also traded them for captured officers.
The Nazi concentration camps generated money through various means. They forced prisoners into labor, which was exploited by private companies that paid the SS (Schutzstaffel) for their use. Additionally, prisoners' personal belongings and valuables were confiscated upon their arrival, and the camps also engaged in various forms of economic exploitation, such as selling confiscated property and possessions. Finally, some camps produced and sold goods, such as textiles or household items.
In the book "Night" by Elie Wiesel, the deportees were forced to leave behind their cherished items on the train, including their personal belongings and valuables. They were allowed to take only the bare essentials with them as they were taken to the concentration camps.
Hitler ordered Nazi comanders to be injected with poison gas and turned them into super villians. They mutated and stole their personal items and sold them to cults __________________ They were stolen. Either at the start, when they were rounded up, or at the end in the camps. (Or indeed at any point in between).
Well when the alliance was nearing the camps, the Germans used more gas and ran out, so they used guns after that in the concentration camps, and lined people up and shot them. He also loved to throw large acorns at them, this induced long-time stress and such items considered computers. There is also no god.
Three significant items to Elie Wiesel in his book "Night" are his father's final words, the memory of his mother and sister, and the symbol of fire representing destruction and death in the concentration camps.
Fish and Chips and Vinegar.
No, the Nazis did a pretty good job of covering up what they did, even to most of the Jews until they were brought to the camps. ____ The fact that victims, often transported from hundreds of miles away, knew nothing, doesn't answer the question. One hears conflicting reports about what local residents knew. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ There was little doubt that the local residents knew about the death camps (as opposed to the concentration camps), for various reasons, including: - the volume of people going in, as opposed to the volume coming out. - the smell of the cremations. - local inhabitants would buy items that workers from the camps had stolen from the dead.
roti
Jews are not animals, they feed themselves like any other human being. In fact, they even have unique styles of cuisine which match their dietary restrictions. Jews have mealtimes at the same general time as non-Jews (breakfast, lunch, and dinner). If, perhaps, this question was referring to when Jews were fed in Concentration Camps, where Jews were deprived of the ability and resources to make their own food, please see the Related Question below.
Yes, there are several all around the world. In the United States there are two major museums. One is located in NYC and is the Holocaust museum. Items are shown from the camps and the people who perished there. It is worth a visit. On the west coast there is the Simon Wiesenthal museum in LA. There are two sections to the museum. One displays the modern hate groups and what they are doing today. The second section makes you part of the story. You walk through a village that the German's are rounding up to take to the camps, and it takes you through the process of what happened to the people. It is very emtional to go through this and realize what it really was like. You get a small card with a picture of a person who died in the Holocaust. Again, it is worth doing.