Yes, If you wonder why i know because...My grandpa was in it and he helped his friends escape and they were shot while escaping... he escaped and didnt go back... they classified him dead but i didnt he was with me. i asked him " how many people survived" he said about 300 people in the 3 years!! hope that helped
Mostly camps in Poland.
The primary countries that liberated prisoners from concentration camps during World War II were the United States, the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, and France. As Allied forces advanced into German-occupied territories, these nations encountered and liberated various camps, such as Auschwitz, Dachau, and Buchenwald, revealing the horrors of the Holocaust. Each of these countries played a crucial role in ending the Nazi regime and rescuing survivors from inhumane conditions.
All kinds of people were put into Nazi concentration camps during World War II. One of the hardest hit communities were the Jews of Europe (and some from North Africa, too). About six million died in concentration camps, though there were survivors.
Yes, some people survived concentration camps. They are known as Holocaust Survivors. Some are even alive today, such as Elie Wiesel, a Nobel Peace Prize Winner and author of his memoir Night.
im not sure if it was Hudson river but German u-boats did come in Canadian waters
One - John Babcock - see http://cefww1soldierjbabcock.blogspot.com/
John Patrick Grogan has written: 'Dieppe and beyond' -- subject(s): Biography, Canadian Personal narratives, German Prisoners and prisons, Personal narratives, Canadian, Prisoners and prisons, German, Prisoners of war, Stalag VIII B (Germany : Concentration Camp), World War, 1939-1945
There are survivors from Auschwitz all over the world. You can find lists of names in records kept at the Yad V'Shem museum in Jerusalem or the Holocaust Memorial in Washington D.C.
No, she died in a German Concentration Camp.
Leslie H. Hardman has written: 'The survivors' -- subject(s): Biography, Bergen-Belsen (Concentration camp), World War, 1939-1945, Chaplains, Social conditions, Military chaplains, Judaism, Concentration camps, Holocaust survivors, Liberation, Great Britain, Great Britain. Army, Concentration camp inmates, Jewish Personal narratives
Sarah Kavanaugh has written: 'ORT, the Second World War and the rehabilitation of Holocaust survivors' -- subject(s): Education, Ex-concentration camp inmates, History, Holocaust survivors, Occupational training for Jews, Refugee camps, World ORT Union
lthe Canadian army killed all of the German soldiers and declared the winnig of the second world war
Mostly camps in Poland.
There are no remaining survivors of WWI
the passage
The primary countries that liberated prisoners from concentration camps during World War II were the United States, the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, and France. As Allied forces advanced into German-occupied territories, these nations encountered and liberated various camps, such as Auschwitz, Dachau, and Buchenwald, revealing the horrors of the Holocaust. Each of these countries played a crucial role in ending the Nazi regime and rescuing survivors from inhumane conditions.
Absolutely - contrary to war movies and propaganda, German U-boat commanders in WWII often gave survivors of sunken vessels food, water, and directions to the nearest land. Only one is known to have actually killed survivors.