In the late 1930's the Nazis killed thousands of handicapped Germans by lethal injection and poisonous gas. After the German invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, mobile killing units following in the wake of the German Army began shooting massive numbers of Jews and Roma (Gypsies) in open fields and ravines on the outskirts of conquered cities and towns. Eventually the Nazis created a more secluded and organized method of killing enormous numbers of civilians -- six extermination centers were established in occupied Poland where large-scale murder by gas and body disposal by cremation were systematically conducted. Victims were deported to these centers from Western Europe and from the ghettos in Eastern Europe which the Nazis had established. In addition, millions died in the ghettos and concentration camps as a result of forced labor, starvation, exposure, brutality, disease and execution.
The Nazis didn't want to carry out the Holocaust publicly, for example in the street.
The Nazis identified two types of camps:work camps - people were inadequately fed and overworked, they were worked to deathdeath camps - people were warehoused then executed in massSecond answer with additional information. These camps were called "Concentration Camps". The term had first been used to explain what the Spanish did in Cuba in the late 1890's. In Cuba, these were not death or slave labor camps; therefore the name at the time in Germany did not necessarily arouse suspicions that the Nazi's had in fact created camps to carry-out mass genocide. Often these major camps had sub-camps built nearby to assist with the various tasks assigned to the camps. For example a major death camp could have several sub-camps established to specialize in slave labor, located near the location of the work being one. For example: The famous Auschwitz/Birkenau Extermination Camp at Oswiecim-Brzezinka had 51 sub-camps.
The Jewish ghetto police secured the deportation of Jewish people to the concentration camps. They were also not permitted to carry weapons.
Death Camps: Hitler created the camps so he could quietly and efficiently kill the Jewish population. Concentration Camps: Used as a sort of prison by the Nazis for the duration of the war. They imprisoned people who committed "crimes" against the Nazi regime.
Generally they were limited to 50kg, or whatever they could carry. But it did not really matter as whatever they brought was taken off them upon arrival.
The death camps were kept outside of Germany because even if the people held there managed to escape somehow, they would have so far to go if they wanted to get back to Germany. As well, the supplies locally outside of Germany were cheaper to help build the camps.
concentration camps. ^ wrong! It's a Colony
The Nazis didn't want to carry out the Holocaust publicly, for example in the street.
He sent millions of people to concentration and extermination camps where they were either worked to death or were killed in gas chambers.
Eventually Jews in Germany were locatable through census records. In other countries, Jews might be found via synagogue membership lists, municipal lists or more likely through mandatory registration and information from neighbors or local civilians and officials. Once in the camps, the fate was sealed.
The Nazis identified two types of camps:work camps - people were inadequately fed and overworked, they were worked to deathdeath camps - people were warehoused then executed in massSecond answer with additional information. These camps were called "Concentration Camps". The term had first been used to explain what the Spanish did in Cuba in the late 1890's. In Cuba, these were not death or slave labor camps; therefore the name at the time in Germany did not necessarily arouse suspicions that the Nazi's had in fact created camps to carry-out mass genocide. Often these major camps had sub-camps built nearby to assist with the various tasks assigned to the camps. For example a major death camp could have several sub-camps established to specialize in slave labor, located near the location of the work being one. For example: The famous Auschwitz/Birkenau Extermination Camp at Oswiecim-Brzezinka had 51 sub-camps.
The Jewish ghetto police secured the deportation of Jewish people to the concentration camps. They were also not permitted to carry weapons.
Death Camps: Hitler created the camps so he could quietly and efficiently kill the Jewish population. Concentration Camps: Used as a sort of prison by the Nazis for the duration of the war. They imprisoned people who committed "crimes" against the Nazi regime.
Generally they were limited to 50kg, or whatever they could carry. But it did not really matter as whatever they brought was taken off them upon arrival.
During the holocaust, Hitler laid down elaborate plans to exterminate all the Jews. Concentration camps with gas chambers and human ovens were meant to carry out the work.
Firstly there were the normal jobs like kitchen duty or cleaning that you would see in any prison. In concentration camps there was a determined effort to keep the inmates busy, so sometimes they were made to dig, carry or do such manual labour just for the sake of it. There were also many construction projects and sub-camps were established to have the workforce close to the Project.
The basic answer is the that the Communists wished to carry out social-class genocide, and the Nazis preferred race genocide. Both were meant to create a similar result of a social utopia, with the 'problem people' gone. Here is a good documentary on this subject: http://www.supernovatube.com/view_video.php?viewkey=42ff5a3c8c58b7fcfc5a