During World War II, the fate of Jews caught in Germany or occupied territory was, especially from 1942 onward, severe and usually fatal. From 1942 onward, Jews were systematically searched out, grouped together, held in restricted zones, eventually transported to concentration camps, then either worked to death, abused and neglected into near-death states, or exterminated directly through various genocidal means.
from about 1940-1945 they would put you in a concentration camp where you were forced to play the game concentration until your head blew up. From 1946-1960 you were put in public and people would throw potatoes at you and in Germany they would throw mashed potatoes at you. and some times you were danced to deathe!
Anyone hiding a Jew from the authorities risked being sent to a concentration camp. In Nazi occupied Poland the penalty was death.
i believe they probably(the people hiding them) were sent to the death camps with the Jews or executed.
They were killed.
you could be in hiding for the duration without ever being caught.
i dont know
They would be taken to camps or killed.
By hiding.
No one really knows for sure, someone told the Nazis about their hiding place. I think :)
you could be in hiding for the duration without ever being caught.
I am sure there were attempts at making an underground railroad like during slavery in the US. The Hiding Place, a book about that sort of topic was written by a Jew caught during the holocaust.
they played
yes
Peter Van Pels was caught by the Nazis during the Holocaust when he and his family were discovered hiding in the secret annex in Amsterdam, where they had been living in hiding with Anne Frank and her family. Their hiding place was betrayed to the authorities, leading to their arrest and deportation to concentration camps.
i dont know
They would be taken to camps or killed.
The Holocaust is over
6,000,000... @*&# u Hitler
No, Anne Frank did not have freedom during the time she was in hiding. She and her family were in hiding to escape Nazi persecution during World War II.
In "The Diary of Anne Frank," the vegetable man who provided produce to the annex residents was arrested by the police for illegally trading goods during wartime rationing. This event highlighted the constant fear and danger faced by those in hiding during the Holocaust.
She was a Christian, living in the Netherlands during WWII. She helped many Jews hide from, or escape, the Nazis during the holocaust. She was eventually caught, and with her sister, sent to a concentration camp where her sister died. She later co-wrote her autobiography The Hiding Place.