Cause they felt nice
The prisoners at Auschwitz were subjected to horrific conditions, including forced labor, malnutrition, and execution. Many were killed in the gas chambers, while others died from disease, starvation, or medical experiments. It is estimated that over one million people lost their lives at Auschwitz during the Holocaust.
They live in the barracks or the houses.
He lived in Auschwitz.
Of the original camp, yes. But not of Birkenau (Auschwitz II) where most of the gassings took place.
Auschwitz, the setting of the majority of the story, is important because it's the one of the harshest concentration camp created by the Germans. Shmuel, a Jewish boy, is forced to live in Auschwitz and Bruno, a German boy, is also forced to live there as well (this is because his father, the commandant got transferred to Auschwitz and the whole family had to follow him).
He had too many prisoners.
The prisoners at Auschwitz were subjected to horrific conditions, including forced labor, malnutrition, and execution. Many were killed in the gas chambers, while others died from disease, starvation, or medical experiments. It is estimated that over one million people lost their lives at Auschwitz during the Holocaust.
They live in the barracks or the houses.
All members of the SS had to have tattoos. Others did not need tattoos.AnswerOnly ethnic Germans and the SS police escaped the registration tattoos, in Nazi Germany. Tattoos were used to mark and tract prisoners who were sent to the labor camps. Jews, homosexuals, the mentally ill, Soviet prisoners of war, Poles, Communists, Jehovah's Witnesses, blacks and the Roma were all tattooed - while in forced labor concentration camps.The Nazis initiated the tattooing program at Auschwitz in mid-1941, but soon the number system was out dated - due to the execution of more inmates than actual live prisoners. Instead, the Nazis introduced a new system that was distinct to each division of the extermination camp - Josef Mengele, who performed inhumane scientific experiments on prisoners, tattooed his own distinct number series on those prisoners depending on where in his camp they were assigned.The purpose was not only to identify but to degrade - making these people a mere number in the system - so less than human. It is horrifying still today how inhumane a human can be.
a person who lives in a cell is a prisoner
Yes, the Nazi mass murders actually began about 1939 with handicapped and mentally defective people, to the Nazis "lives not worth living". Also fit for slaughter were any eastern Europeans or Slavic people, Gypsies especially, and homosexuals. Common criminals, political prisoners, prisoners of war, any Russian. The Nazis were remaking society, and it was to be a society free of all undesirables, from the Nazi point of view. The Nazis intended to create a new area for Germans to live in to the east of Germany, and the people already there....needed to go. They were only "untermenschen" (subhumans) anyway.
He lived in Auschwitz.
Some prisoners kill themselves because they can't live in prisons.
Of the original camp, yes. But not of Birkenau (Auschwitz II) where most of the gassings took place.
Auschwitz, the setting of the majority of the story, is important because it's the one of the harshest concentration camp created by the Germans. Shmuel, a Jewish boy, is forced to live in Auschwitz and Bruno, a German boy, is also forced to live there as well (this is because his father, the commandant got transferred to Auschwitz and the whole family had to follow him).
They still live, in are hearts! They still live, in are hearts!
Otto Frank died in 1980, so he lived for about 25 years after being liberated from Auschwitz.