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Assuming Anne Frank is the Anne mentioned, she spent about six months at the Bergen-Belson concentration camp. This camp was where the prisoners who were either too weak or too sick to work were sent, and like the other prisoners, Anne was deprived of food and water and died of Typhus at the age of 15.
The only Nazi camp that tattooed prisoners was the Auschwitz group, where prisoners selected for work were tattooed. Prisoners at other camps and those sent immediately to be gassed at Auschwitz were not tattooed.
They could be put to work on non-war related activities under the Geneva Convention. Many were put to work growing food for the use of the prisoners.
Japanese and most German prisoners remained confined to Allied camps. Many Italian prisoners were allowed out to work on farms in Britain and Australia and in many cases left the camps for the duration of the war. As for Allied prisoners in Axis hands, the Japanese and to a lesser extent the Germans required prisoners to work, in the case of the Japanese, often to death.
The Holocaust was the systematic murder of six million Jews during ww2. There were some fortunate ones who were able to hide (at least temporarily). Those who hid, such as Anne Frank, had to endure privation of many kinds.
Assuming Anne Frank is the Anne mentioned, she spent about six months at the Bergen-Belson concentration camp. This camp was where the prisoners who were either too weak or too sick to work were sent, and like the other prisoners, Anne was deprived of food and water and died of Typhus at the age of 15.
Auschwitz, Dachau, Bergen Belsen, Treblinka,
Westerbork (transit camp)Auschwitz II (Women's Work Camp)Bergen-Belsen
Up until a group of Hungarians came from Auschwitz bringing typhus with them, the conditions in Bergen-Belsen were bearable. Some didn't have to work, and were not required to wear prison clothing. In the beginning of 1945 before the British arrived, the conditions deteriorated and cleanliness was absent. Food was scarce, and overcrowding came from transports from other camps in the Germans' rush to hide their nasty secrets.
Answer 1First, Anne Frank and the others hiding in the secret annexe were taken to Westerbork, a transit camp. From there, Anne was sent to Auschwitz and then to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp near Hanover, where she died because she caught typhus.Answer 2Well, Anne Frank first stared were all dutch Jews go, Westbork, Anne and Margot were then transferred to Authuzwic an extermination camp in poland while Edith died at Westbork, Later, Anne and Margot were sent to Bergen Belsen in Germany, Margot died there in early Febuary of tyhus and two weeks later Anne died of a broken heart.
hard work...
Able bodied prisoners had to work as slave labourers.
Anne Frank and her family went into hiding during World War II to escape persecution by the Nazis. They were eventually discovered and arrested by the Gestapo. Anne Frank died in a concentration camp in 1945.
The only Nazi camp that tattooed prisoners was the Auschwitz group, where prisoners selected for work were tattooed. Prisoners at other camps and those sent immediately to be gassed at Auschwitz were not tattooed.
Anne Frank was sent to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in Germany in October 1944. She died there in March 1945, shortly before the camp was liberated by Allied forces.
prisoners were not allowed to work on ordnance . tortured.
They could be put to work on non-war related activities under the Geneva Convention. Many were put to work growing food for the use of the prisoners.