No one survived from the death marches. Everyone involved in the actual marching was sent to another concentration camp where they would have died or maybe would have survived butthat wouldn't be a death march then. The others went to be executed.
at liberation there were about 7 500, but many of these died soon after. There were about 100 000 more survivors who had been in Auschwitz.
no
Death marches transported Jews from concentration camp to concentration camp as the Allies neared.
there were two main reasons: the marches occurred because the camps from which they started were under threat of liberation, so the inmates were marched to another camp the marches were a way of killing the participants, some marches did not even reach their destination, they would just keep marching until all of the charges died or the guards deserted
1 hour to a couple days, some were 8 miles, some were 80 __________________ Death marches were generally hundreds or thousands of miles, the aim was to march people until they died.
at liberation there were about 7 500, but many of these died soon after. There were about 100 000 more survivors who had been in Auschwitz.
There were many Death Marches during World War II and the Holocaust. The first were observed during 1942 and the last marches in 1945.
Death marches were so tragic because lots of people died.
they were injued
58,000 men and woman were forced onto death marches.
no
Death Marches
Death marches transported Jews from concentration camp to concentration camp as the Allies neared.
they were called 'Death Marches'.
The ship broke up. A lot of people froze to death in icy north Atlantic ocean waiting for rescue. The next morning the Carpathia rescued the survivors.
She was arrested and Martin King was brief about it and she was instantly put for marches.
you stupid head get a LIFE!!