Let me just tell you first that resistance in Nazi concentration camps was not just fighting for what you believe in or to defend yourself. Some ways were like I said fight, give food to someone starving, hold someone up in roll-call, hiding someone from death, replacing someone's arm number with a dead one, helping someone up, warm another, give hope to another, etc...
--There's more, but I feel like these are the main ones.
yes, or rather some people who happened to be Nazis beat some people to death, but it was not because they were Nazis, rather just because they were touched.
If you mean the communities that they conquered or took over during the war, the reaction was mixed. There was a lot of fear, but after the battles, the resistance was often low, since people didn't want to be harmed under the new regime. Some people resisted secretly, and some people openly welcomed them and agreed with their policies.
There were several ways that slaves resisted their treatment in America. These included breaking tools, uprooting plants, working slow, or some even ran away.
There were several ways that slaves resisted their treatment in America. These included breaking tools, uprooting plants, working slow, or some even ran away.
The Neo-Nazis target the same groups as the Nazis did - plus Muslims in some cases. The same people that the Nazi government did as well as sone muslims
All Jews regardless of any status, were killed by the Nazis, with no exceptions. Some were spared temporarily if they were able to be of some use to the Nazis, but in the end the Nazis wanted them all dead. ___ The fact that the Holocaust involved killing some highly qualified people didn't bother the Nazis in the least.
since hitler comitted suicide there was no one to give them orders and were killed and discriminated by people that hated nazis (some)
People resisted the holocaust by leaving the area or by hiding. Some people did fight back but very few were armed and most were unable to resist.
The Nazis employed some Jewish people to guard others that were confined in the Warsaw ghetto. The Jewish ghetto police, also called flops, were promised better treatment, and promised freedom. The flops were very brutal in some cases exceeding the brutality of the Nazis themselves.
Tea
Many of the people who were ruled were forced to become slaves. Those who resisted were executed.
Some ways enslaved people resisted slavery included running away or escaping, sabotaging work tools or tasks, engaging in acts of rebellion or insurrection, practicing their own customs or cultural traditions in secret, and forming close relationships and communities with other enslaved individuals.