Security was very tight and escaping was extremely difficult.
They got sent to concentration camps, work camps, or death factories.
Most of the concentration camps were demolished after the war, a few famous ones like Dachau were turned into Holocaust museums.
they put children and adults to work. concentration camps starved people to death and they had bad quality sleeping areas like, 3 people could fit into 1 twin sized bed
Yes. There are several preserved that one can still visit. Concentration camps like those from the Holocaust have been used in other places and times, too. They were more recently used in Bosnia and tens of thousands died.
Rough, probably almost as bad as being transported to an American PoW camp.
poor, it was reasonable polar, if you worked outside you would not see shelter all day.
hopeless
The Internment camps for Japanese-Americans were structures and the Holocaust is a concept. There were camps within the Holocaust designed and used to imprison certain sections of society, much like the internment camps in the USA. But what went on in these camps was very different.
Death marches were the marching of inmates from one concentration camp to another.
It's common to draw a distinction between 'ordinary' concentration camps like Dachau and Buchenwald, and extermination camps. The latter existed only for the purpose of killing. They are:Auschwitz II (Birkenau section)BelzecChelmnoMajdanek (part only)SobiborTreblinka IIIn addition, there were transit camps and various 'specialized' camps.
If you mean that you want to make a presentation/project about the Holocaust, but in a unique and creative way, then I suggest you try something that you wouldn't normally do, like: - Create a model of a concentration camp, with a description - Do a skit on people being taken into the concentration camps - Write a 'journal' based on the life of someone living during the Holocaust
Oh, dude, the Holocaust was like totally systematic. It was all organized and planned out by the Nazis to exterminate millions of people, with concentration camps, gas chambers, and all that fun stuff. So, yeah, pretty systematic if you ask me.