Simply put - most Jews were worked to death. They often worked hard labor for up to 16 hours per day - having only 1 small meal - which generally had little or no nutritional value. On average, they lived for about 45 to 60 days after arriving at the concentration camp.
Of course there were exceptions - if one could cook or play an instrument well or had some exceptional ability - they were used as entertainment. Often attractive women were used as sex slaves to several Germans - but his was a VERY tightly kept secret; a German man should never have sex with a Jewish woman - it made the man "dirty" according to Hitler. This was rare because everybody (even children) had their heads shaved upon entering the concentration camps - to control lice.
As far as tortured - this may take some explaining! Being in the camps was torture iteself - but the Germans never tortured prisoners - they had no reason - they were not looking for answers to anything - all they wanted from their Jewish prisoners was for them to die. But of course there were exceptions to this - often there was sadistic guards that beat women and men to death for fun - rare but it did happen. ALso it must be taken into consideration that most knew they were there to die - and things like "showers" that were actually posionous gas - were well known. So lining up for a shower - would be considered torture.
they starved them in block 13, gassed, beatup, tested operations (e.g opening the stomach whist they are alive.)
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[presumably you mean block 11 in Auschwitz] (where there were also suffocation cells)
The Nazis were involved in the concentration camp Buchenwald because it was a camp for political prisoners.
No, there was no such thing as a "good" concentration camp!
Because Auschwitz was the toughest concentration camp in the world at that moment.
Camps for political prisoners have been called a detention center, a concentration camp, prisoner of war camp, labor camp, or gulag.
Yes, prisoners at the Flossenbürg concentration camp were tattooed. In many concentration camps, including Flossenbürg, prisoners were marked with a series of numbers as a means of identification. These tattoos were typically placed on the prisoner's forearm.
The Jews during this point in time at every concentration camp were marked by numbers tattooed on there forearms
Please clarify: Civil inmates? Prisoners of War? Concentration Camp Prisoners?
A WWII concentration camp holding Jews and polish prisoners of war.
Amersfoort was a Nazi concentration camp. Between 1941 and 1945 there were over 35,000 prisoners that were kept in the camp.
Ravensbrück was an all-female camp and had some of the very worst female camp guards.
During the holocaust, Gleiwitz concentration camp in Gliwice, Poland, was operational between March of 1944 and January of 1945. During this time the camp held around 1,300 prisoners. It is thought that many, if not all, of these prisoners died.
They slept in beds . They slept in beds .