prisoners the free and camps consentration the enter us the did year what 1945
Germany's allies, known as the axis, did not free the prisoners in camps. The allied armies freed the prisoners.
Prisoners in concentration camps did not have lives that were free. They starved, got sick, fell ill from exposure, wasted away and some died right on the spot when they were doing slave work. The only thing they could do was sing together, talk, pray and try to survive. Some were even killed just for talking, singing and praying.
From about September 1944 on, the SS began moving prisoners away from camps in Poland to other camps deep inside Germany, and from January 1945 on the prisoners were taken on death marches. The SS also tried, as far as possible, to destroy evidence of the Holocaust.
liberation.
Why? Because the Jews were starving, and almost dead. When Americans found concentration camps, most were abandoned by Nazis.
April 11th 1945
The Jews were liberated from the concentration camps.
By 1944 Nazi had 13 main concentration camps and over 500 satellite camps. The concentration camps were not just to murder people but also for free slave labor.
If they were found by the Nazis then yes, but if they were not, then they would just get free.
nothing. Nothing was done until military conquest ensured that Germany lost control of the camps.
Joseph Mengele was a medical doctor in Germany, that simply chose to perform experiments on the prisoners in concentration camps - and was given free reign to do so - especially with twins (he was convinced that twins also carried the same mental thoughts - and could communicate mentally).
As the allies began advancing on concentration/death camp locations, the Nazis would frantically try to destroy them with whatever explosive supplies they had on hand. That would account for the camp itself, but what of the prisoners? They were sent on 'Death marches' or simply shot into a mass grave. More times than not, however, the allies would arrive before the Nazis could destroy the camps. The allies would then free the prisoners and make sure they received food and health care. A handful of camps that still remain were made into museums, so that the public may never forget the evils man can perpetrate unto one another. An example of this is the infamous Auschwitz camp.