lonely and suffering form the hard ship of mining
No, the Nazis did not call the SS men who worked in the Concentration Camps babies. They would never do that since they were the most severe, powerful and deadly men in the Nazi Forces. Most did not even know about the concentration camps except those high up in leadership, Himmler, the workers of the camps and the people who lived around the camps knew of them.
was relief program in which young, jobless men lived in rural camps and worked on enviromental projects
In concentration camps, since men and women were separated, young children were put in the women's section. However, if the concentration camps were also extermination camps, the children were often murdered upon arrival.
ss men or gastapo
The Civilian Conservation Corps employed 274,375 young men between the ages of 17 and 25 in 1,300 camps nationwide. By 1935 the number of camps and employed young men increased dramatically. Eventually, almost 3 million people served in the Corps.
lonely and suffering form the hard ship of mining
For a time in the US history of coal mining, many of the miners lived on coal company property. This was especially true among the coal mining companies in West Virginia.
men were fustraited bout not finding gold
men were fustraited bout not finding gold
No, the Nazis did not call the SS men who worked in the Concentration Camps babies. They would never do that since they were the most severe, powerful and deadly men in the Nazi Forces. Most did not even know about the concentration camps except those high up in leadership, Himmler, the workers of the camps and the people who lived around the camps knew of them.
was relief program in which young, jobless men lived in rural camps and worked on enviromental projects
There can be disasters, like the Chilean Mining Disaster. The men were mining in the San Hose gold and copper mine, the tunnel caved in and the men got stuck for 69 days. People have to be very careful of mining cause they can die from these disasters such as explosions and caving in.
Once they arrived at the camps the people were separated into groups. Men and women were separated and many couples never saw each other again. They were tortured, treated like slaves and prisoners, murdered, experimented on, beaten, and made to lived horrible lives where they were starved, freezing, and made to watch each other die.
Yes, is the simple answer. 'Gay men' in this case means those convicted of homosexual acts, this was a civil, domestic matter. Those convicted were sent to camps in Germany, like Dachau. Jews were sent to the east and when they were sent to camps they were most often in Poland. This does not exclude the issue that some Jews were sent to camps in Germany and some Homosexuals were sent to camps in Poland.
could not vote intelligently
could not vote intelligently
Some committed suicide, some were put on trial; a few escaped to South America but many went home, changed their names and 'lived happily ever after'.