Many kind of questions you could ask but my 3 are
1. How was it like being in a concentration camp
2. What was you force to do whiles you was in the concentration camp
3. Did you witness 1st hand of seeing someone being killed
i guess it was the first person to read the newspaper on 22nd March 1933. the camps were not a secret, it was what was happening inside the camps that was the secret. A better question would be when did certain things start to happen inside the camps, but then you are entering a moral minefield as different people will think that different methods are appropriate and you would also be making a moral judgment on what happens in the camps today. Or you could ask when the camps changed to a policy of murder rather than punishment and rehabilitation.
Both the Axis powers and the allies used concentration camps of different sizes during WWII. There were at least 1200 in German controlled areas, and hundreds under each rule, ran by Japanese, Russians, British and US military/authorities.The biggest known camp in Europe was Auschwitz II-Birkenau, that was an extermination camp, with over 100000 living in the camp.In small camp there could be only dozens of prisoners.
The Nazi's wanted all the Jews to look alike so they wouldn't have trouble telling them apart they didn't think that the Jews were even to them so they thought to save them some hassle so they didn't have to stop everyone and ask to see there number every time they walked by!!! The Jews were prisoners in the concentration camp and the striped pajamas were the uniform for the concentration camps.
The number of daily kill count in the concentration camps varied. Toward the end of the war it was tens of thousands a month. Many documents were burned so knowing the exact total of daily murdering is impossible. Second Answer: Contact the related link below to ask the Holocaust Museum if they know the exact amount of deaths per day at the extermination camps. I did not find any record of a daily count but they would know if there is a record.
Most of the people sent to the concentration camps and death camps during the Holocaust were Jews. But other groups of individuals sent to the camps included homosexuals, gypsies, political opponents, those who hid and helped Jews, blacks, and resistance workers.
to ask questions
You should ask Germans that question because Dachau was a German concentration camp during WW2. Sofar all your questions have been nonsense.............nothing better to do ?????????
Permission?!?!?! Hitler was a brutal dictator. Dictators do not ask permission of anyone.
If you could talk to Hitler on a level playing field, what would you say to him? Who do you feel is most responsible for the holocaust? (if at concentration camp) who liberated the camp you were at? Before ww2 were there any descrimintation to Jewish people?
When the president institutes martial law, people will ask, "they can't possibly arrest all of us, can they?". The answer will be yes, and the FEMA death camps are where all people who ask questions will be detained and or executed as terrorists.
Because they don't exist. Sorry to be so abrupt. And if they did exist I'm sure Obama would want to keep them a secret. Also if they did exist as a secret why would you know about them. Please don't ask pointless questions
Oh who knows maybe people grew tired of the unnecessary slaughtering of innocent people. (sarcasm) Seriously who would ask a question like that?
The questions ask answers
i guess it was the first person to read the newspaper on 22nd March 1933. the camps were not a secret, it was what was happening inside the camps that was the secret. A better question would be when did certain things start to happen inside the camps, but then you are entering a moral minefield as different people will think that different methods are appropriate and you would also be making a moral judgment on what happens in the camps today. Or you could ask when the camps changed to a policy of murder rather than punishment and rehabilitation.
what questions did plato ask
Both the Axis powers and the allies used concentration camps of different sizes during WWII. There were at least 1200 in German controlled areas, and hundreds under each rule, ran by Japanese, Russians, British and US military/authorities.The biggest known camp in Europe was Auschwitz II-Birkenau, that was an extermination camp, with over 100000 living in the camp.In small camp there could be only dozens of prisoners.
Yes, you can ask cooking questions.