Before the Jewish people were sent into Concentration camps, they were sent to labor camps. After they did not want to use them in the labor camps any longer, then sent them to the Concentration Camps.
In pre-WWII Germany and Poland, many cities had a "Jewish Quarter", the neighborhood that was primarily Jewish. These were called "ghettos". (The 1960's appropriation of the word "ghetto" to mean the part of the city primarily occupied by black people was a small part of their dehumanization.) In Russia, especially pre-Soviet Russia, the term "shtetl" was used to refer to a predominantly Jewish village.
ghettos, concentration camps, and death camps
They were forced to live in Ghettos and concentration camps
Just pure determination.
In the early Years, they were sent to the Concentration Camps by train in cattle carts which were originally used to transporting dead and live cows to the slaghter houses and farms.
The Jews lives were horrible and devasting because they had very little food and water.
They were sent to concentration and internment camps, where they were either immediately murdered, or forced to work and live under horrible conditions. Before these camps, they were rounded up and put in ghettos, which became a separated part of the city where only Jews could live. Most Jews don't talk about their expiriences in WW2
I presume that you mean the ghettos, concentration camps, and death camps. Ghettos were closed off portions of towns and cities, most famously the Warsaw Ghetto, where Jews were forced to live. The ghettos were gradually liquidated, and the Jews sent to concentration and death camps as quickly as the Germans could manage.
Before they were sent to the extermination camps, many Jews were forced to live in ghettos. They have insufficient food and no medication and usually no photographic film, either. In the Lodz Ghetto, where the supremo collaborated (to some extent, anyway) they did take some photos. These were hidden when the ghetto was finally dissolved in 1944, but have recently been found.
yes they lived close to the camps
before being moved to concentration camps, they would sometimes be rounded up into ghettos
AnswerThey were usually hiding from the Nazi's in abandoned buildings, as for the unlucky Jews, they were living in concentration camps.___Most of them were living in ghettos. Very few were in hiding. After all, hiding for a long time is difficult.
During the Holocaust the Jews were first sent to ghettos and from there to extermination camps and concentration camps.After the Holocaust many Jews were unable to go home and had to live in camps for Displaced Persons until they could find somewhere permanent.