i am 60% German, so i happen to know a bit about Germans and Nazis.
Nazis would hold Jews in death camps, where they would later be killed either by being shot, starvation, or by a deadly gas when taking a "shower" (creepy right?!) that is all i know, i hope that helped a little! ;D
~Annaliese, 11
Most of the Dachau prisoners were taken there in trucks and on trains. The Nazis held guns on them the entire time until they were ushered into barracks.
The Nazis made the slaved Jews wear wood, or leather clogs while occupied in the death camps because the shoes would give the Jews blisters and the blisters will lead to infection and infection will lead to death. The Nazis did anything they could to get rid of Jews faster.
If the question is about prisoners held in the Nazi German Concentration Camps during the Second World War, then anyone of them not fit to work for the Nazis were sent to the Gas Chambers (or other methods) to be killed. Those fit to work, were used as slave labor until they were starved or worked to death.
The first prison where Corrie ten Boom was held is known as Scheveningen Prison, located in The Hague, Netherlands. She was arrested by the Nazis in February 1944 and held there before being transferred to other concentration camps. Scheveningen Prison was notorious for its harsh conditions and treatment of prisoners.
Both animals and prisoners were held in underground pens.
Generally it was transported to & fro (In Europe at least) by the Red Cross. This applies to British & US forces. The Red Cross did much to ensure the safety and survival of hundreds & thousands of prisoners. There is then a vast contrast between on one hand the treatment of German & Italian prisoners held by the Allies & the Russian prisoners of the Nazis and the German prisoners of the Russians & similarly the Japanese Allied prisoners: The conditions were appalling. There were very few Japanese prisoners: Surrender wasn't an option.
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The Nazis held a book burning event in 1933, where they publicly burned books deemed "un-German" or against Nazi ideology. These burnings aimed to erase ideas and authors considered contrary to Nazi beliefs.
Both. They captured the most valiant of their enemy and in a ceremony on top of one of their many pyramids, the priest cut out the soldiers heart and held it up for all to see -- still beating.
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for the safety of citizens of San Francisco
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