A few did, yes.
May 1940 in a big load but hitler did send jews to camps as early as 1933 but none of them were killed
Jews had some idea of what was happening. Most of their friends would just disappear and even in concentration camps they noticed people leave and never come back.
Some Jews were sent to concentration camps in 1933, and a further batch was sent to camps from 1938 onwards. The wholesale transportation of Jews to death camps started in 1941. However, many had been forced to lead a wretched existence in ghettoes since 1939/40.
Women in the Third Reich were rewarded for being pregnant, if they gave birth to more than four children they were given a medal. By the time of the Holocaust it was illegal for Jews to become pregnant. The policy was to allow the pregnancy to come to term before executing both, however this was not always the practice.
ordered by Hitler to concentrate enemies of Hitlers Reich into prison camps.... but concentation camps originated in America. The United States used concentation camps before Hitler. They used the concentation camps on the Native Americans. look up fort sumner in New Mexico. The navajo people were forced to be in these camps way before the jews.
May 1940 in a big load but hitler did send jews to camps as early as 1933 but none of them were killed
Jews had some idea of what was happening. Most of their friends would just disappear and even in concentration camps they noticed people leave and never come back.
Some Jews were sent to concentration camps in 1933, and a further batch was sent to camps from 1938 onwards. The wholesale transportation of Jews to death camps started in 1941. However, many had been forced to lead a wretched existence in ghettoes since 1939/40.
Early examples of concentration camps are said to have been found in the American Civil War and in the Boer War but in Europe it is probably fair to say that they were an evolved form of ghetto, invented by the Church for the containment of Jews throughout Europe and throughout the Christian era and later adapted as work camps, then as extermination camps for minorities of many kinds, including Jews, the disabled, gypsies, dissidents and non heterosexuals. They would appear to be one among several responses to the Emperor Constantine's letter to the first Council of Nicea, whose first line is said to have read: "What shall we do about the Jews?"
Ghettos preceded concentration camps. Concentration camps appeared during the Nazi era in Germany. Ghettos were present in the largest cities in Germany (and other large urban areas in other countries) well before that.
Women in the Third Reich were rewarded for being pregnant, if they gave birth to more than four children they were given a medal. By the time of the Holocaust it was illegal for Jews to become pregnant. The policy was to allow the pregnancy to come to term before executing both, however this was not always the practice.
For an Waffen-SS soldier any Soldier could remove Jews from their homes and put them on trains to the concentration camps but the orders must come from at least a SS- Sturmbannführer: SS-Storm Command leader or a anyone who has a high power of authority For the German Soldiers, Only soldiers with the rank of Obergefreiter could do the job of evacuating Jews from their homes but only can be done from a military personal with the rank of Major
ordered by Hitler to concentrate enemies of Hitlers Reich into prison camps.... but concentation camps originated in America. The United States used concentation camps before Hitler. They used the concentation camps on the Native Americans. look up fort sumner in New Mexico. The navajo people were forced to be in these camps way before the jews.
* The first concentration camps were set up in 1933, mainly for political opponents of the Nazi regime. These early inmates included some Jews, sent there as opponents, not as Jews. * 11 November 1938 onwards - in the aftermath of the 'Night of the Broken Glass' about 30,000 German and Austrian Jews were sent to concentration camps, and about 2,000 died by Chritmas 1938. The main idea was to make life hell for them and bully them in leaving Germany. * November 1939 onwards - Jews in Nazi occupied Poland were forced into ghettos. * 7 December 1941 the first extermination camp - Chelmno - becomes operational. Mass gassings of Jews from western Poland. The roundups and transports began a few days earlier. Deportations from Germany to the killing fields of Latvia and Belarus and to the Warsaw Ghetto started on 15 October 1941. At that stage there were no extermination camps.
no
On 9-10 November 1938, about 400 Jews killed and a further 30,000 were seized and sent to concentration camps. Of these, 2,000 were dead within six weeks. Note. The number of Jews killed that night was for a long time given as 91. This was the official figure given some days later by the Nazi regime. More recently, research (cited in the German language Wikipedia article on the subject) has carefully examined the available evidence and concluded that the real figure was about 400). == ==There was a desperate stampede to get out of Germany and Austria. Have a look at this question: http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_is_Kristallnacht_and_why_is_it_a_significant_event
To keep control of generally a considered enemy such as the Jews during WWII and the Japanese in the U.S. and Canada. Canada had what they lovingly called "camps" in the Interior of B.C. The people were freezing in the winter and frying in the summer. They were given just the necessities in clothing and food and no more. Even though they were Canadian citizens they were considered the enemy and thus they lost their homes and contents in the homes. Unfair? You bet it was! At least they should have put them into more comfortable lodgings in the camps and kept their homes and contents for them to come back too. Just recently the Canadian Gov't had to pay per Japanese person and their children a $17,000 for this treatment. It did nothing to take the nightmarish trauma away and the loss they incurred.