The Jews and Gypsies within the ghetto were the most affected.
Camps, by far. Ghettos held only a couple of million people, where as there were tens of millions in the camps (not all at the same time).
During the holocaust, the main religion affected was Judaism. Please don't be daft, phrase your question more carefully next time.
They didn't really made a living. They did anything to survive. The ghettos that survived a long time were the productive ghettos.
Prejudice affected Jews during the Holocaust because even before the Holocaust it was all around the and during the Holocaust because the Nazi's and the SS enforced it heavily. Non-Jews were affected by it because it made them look at it with a whole new perspective.
Six million Jews died during the Holocaust. Many more (e.g. their families, friends, etc.) were affected. About 5 million Jews were murdered in the Holocaust. More than hundreds of thousands of Jews emigrated away to different countries.
Nothing specific, the US was fighting a war for most of the time during the Holocaust.
During world war II where they put thousands of Jews at one time.
When they left the ghettos they usually left in box cars (trains) and were very cramped. They had to stand for sometimes hours on end. By this time they knew they were heading to a worse place, and the propaganda slowly started to fade.
They talk about the holocaust?
At the time of the Holocaust much of Europe was fighting World War 2.
World War II
they didnt.. -_-