The US did NOT "rescue Jews from the concentration camps." When the US and England had a chance to destroy Nazi concentration camps with bombing, they refused, preferring instead to bomb other military targets. Years later, at the end of the war, after six million Jews had already been murdered, some US troops participated in "liberating" a few Nazi camps. However, by then it was too late. There were very few Jews left alive.
they were against it, instead they prefered to wait until the army arrived and the camps were liberated in line with where the front was.
If you are talking about the Holocaust, some Jews were hidden by kind people, and some escaped the country before they got put in concentration camps. Some survived the camps.___________Many were beyond the reach of the Nazis - for example, those in the US.
they pretended not to know
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.
Unless they were on vacation or were born in America, and was in a Nazi controlled area at the time of the holocaust, there is almost no chance of them being put into a concentration camp. The question refers to American Jews who may have been traveling in Europe and got caught up in the war and could not get back to the US. Were American Jews treated any differently than European Jews who were interred in the camps? ____ On the whole American Jews in Nazi controlled areas were treated well as the Nazis hoped to exchange them for Germans in America.
they were against it, instead they prefered to wait until the army arrived and the camps were liberated in line with where the front was.
nothing. Nothing was done until military conquest ensured that Germany lost control of the camps.
The SS anfd Todt Organization (Engineers) built concentration camps in Europe for Jews The Army Corps of Engineers built internment camps for Japanese Americans in the southwestern US
None.
If you are talking about the Holocaust, some Jews were hidden by kind people, and some escaped the country before they got put in concentration camps. Some survived the camps.___________Many were beyond the reach of the Nazis - for example, those in the US.
The Jews were tricked by the Nazi Germans. The Jews and the general populace of Germany bought all the lies the Nazi Germans fed them about the Jews and the concentration camps. Most Germans believed the death camps were work camps and war manufacturing places - they are the ones who lived in denial because they feared for their lives and rightly so. They knew they were not labor camps. You could smell the stink of death from more than a mile a way. They knew. Many Jews escaped or fled to the forests in various countries. Some managed to make it to the US and the presidential cabinet heard the horrid truth about the concentration camps.
they pretended not to know
no, they are independent states.
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.
Unless they were on vacation or were born in America, and was in a Nazi controlled area at the time of the holocaust, there is almost no chance of them being put into a concentration camp. The question refers to American Jews who may have been traveling in Europe and got caught up in the war and could not get back to the US. Were American Jews treated any differently than European Jews who were interred in the camps? ____ On the whole American Jews in Nazi controlled areas were treated well as the Nazis hoped to exchange them for Germans in America.
prisoners the free and camps consentration the enter us the did year what 1945
The Nazis who killed the inmates and not much documents about the camps