One of the biggest ghettos in history was the Warsaw Ghetto in Poland during World War II. It housed over 400,000 Jews in a small area, leading to overcrowding, starvation, and disease before its destruction in the Holocaust.
The answer to the question is Germany. Germany was not one of the Allied Powers during World War 1. The Allied Powers during World War 1 were: Russia The US France
Kaiser Wihlhelm II was the leader of Germany during World War one. After the war, he moved quietly to France and did not support Germany during WWII.
germany
The religions in Germany in World War I were the same as now. About one third Catholic, one third Lutheran and one third other.
no one ever
Germany Italy And Japan
germany, japan, italy, is that enough for you?
Isaac Brauman, a Jewish individual during World War II, was associated with the Łódź Ghetto in Poland. This ghetto was established by the Nazis and became one of the largest Jewish ghettos in occupied Europe. It faced severe conditions, including overcrowding, starvation, and forced labor, ultimately leading to the deportation of many of its residents to concentration camps.
France regained Alsace and Lorraine from Germany after world war one. They had lost these territories to Germany during the Franco Persian War.
When it was sealed off the Warsaw Ghetto had about 450,000 inhabitants.
Warsaw ghetto.