Just prior to the end of the war, many officers in work/death camps abandoned the populations, and locked them in. Many of the people inside were suffering from exposure, naked, starved, and unable to even process food. Their bodies were literally reduced to skeletons, many unable to walk. The look in their eyes can be described as beyond suffering. Many survivors still have the numbers on their arms, tattooed. For them, the Holocaust, or Shoach, never ended, because the people who died still aren't alive, and many people of the world still want to see Jews exterminated.
The holocaust started on the 1st of September 1939 and finished on D-day in 1945.
There is not a clear answer to that.
But the persecution ended in 1945.
The Holocaust was never really over. There are Holocausts happening right now in Iraq and other places of the world.
The Holocaust ended 1944-1945
Dachau, near München.
The previous doctor fell ill, and Mengele came in.
When I talked to a Holcaust survivor they said they deal with it by talking about it to people to share there story.
it marks the end of the 10th year on earth because your first birthday marks the end of your first year on earth and it continues from there.
The year the world will end no one knows. Some people think it is 2012 but it is not.
pepol who were gay
Germany and Poland.
yes some are
Dachau, near München.
I'm not sure from your question what specific date you are looking for. The holocaust started in the mid 1930's and went on until the end of world war two in august 1945.
Jews or presumed to be Jewish people and Gays/Lesbains.
The previous doctor fell ill, and Mengele came in.
Both "end-of-the-year" and "end of the year" can be grammatically correct, depending on the context. "End-of-the-year" is typically used as an adjective when referring to something related to the end of the year, while "end of the year" is used when simply discussing the conclusion of the year.
When I talked to a Holcaust survivor they said they deal with it by talking about it to people to share there story.
The term "swatchka" was originally coined by Anthony Burgess in his novel "A Clockwork Orange" to mean "sweat" in the fictional Nadsat language used by the characters in the book. It represented a slang term for physical exertion or effort.
year end
At the end of the year.