In concentration camps roll-call on the Appelplatz took place at least twice a day and was often deliberately prolonged in order to add to the prisoners' miseries.
A jail or Prison
Those blue numbers burnt into peoples' flesh were the number of course. It was required to keep track of the prisoners at roll-call when they call out everybody barrack after barrack.
Prisoners at Flossenburg wore what prisoners in other concentration camps wore; striped uniforms.
The only Nazi camp that tattooed prisoners was the Auschwitz group, where prisoners selected for work were tattooed. Prisoners at other camps and those sent immediately to be gassed at Auschwitz were not tattooed.
A prison gang.
prison
Amnesty
umm.. no one prisoners are being beaten because they did soemthing bad.l0l
"Hand Cuffs" is the object that keeps a prisoners hand joined together.
Dungeon
In concentration camps roll-call on the Appelplatz took place at least twice a day and was often deliberately prolonged in order to add to the prisoners' miseries.
The Appellplatz was a central area or square used for roll-call. (Appell - roll-call). Sometimes prisoners had to watch whippings and hangings there, too. At many concentration camps, roll-call (twice a day) was deliberately spun out and used to make the prisoners' lives a misery. Often it lasted 2 hours plus and the prisoners had to stand to attention throughout, but the SS guards walked around. On 11 (?) December 1938 at Buchenwald the numbers didn't tally at evening roll-call and the prisoners were recounted twice in freezing weather. At the end of it some of the prisoners were dead!
A jail or Prison
Fritz.
a cup of soup per day.
Fish, fresh fish.