The sole purpose of the extermination camps was to kill Jews and gypsies, usually by gassing, except for a small number who were selected to help with the extermination process itself. At these camps nearly all new arrivals were gassed as soon as practical:
There are very few survivors from these camps (two each from Belzec and Chelmno, about 50 from Sobibor and about 40 from Trelinka II).
The Auschwitz group of camps was different. It had a gassing centre (part of Aischwitz II aka Birkenau) and was also a vast group of concentration camps (forced labour camps). Physically fit new arrivals were sent to the concentration camps, where most of them were worked to death on grossly inadequate rations.
Majdanek was the only other camp that combined both functions.
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.
The largest Nazi death camp was Auschwitz, located in occupied Poland, near the town of Oświęcim. Established in 1940, it became the primary site for the mass extermination of Jews and other targeted groups during the Holocaust. Auschwitz consisted of several camps, including Auschwitz I, Auschwitz II-Birkenau, and Auschwitz III-Monowitz, with Birkenau serving as the main extermination center. It is estimated that over a million people were killed there.
blacks, women,homosexuals and comies
Yes. From about April 1944 onward, the Hungarian government was in the hands of Hungarian Nazis. They sent most of the Hungarian Jews to Auschwitz and other camps to be used a slave labour or gassed. About 450,000 Hungarian Jews were killed in the Holocaust.
The number of people in the Auschwitz complex at any one time was relatively small by comparison with the total number killed there. According to Wikipedia, there were between 13,000 and 16,000 prisoners in Auschwitz at one time. At least 1.1 million people were killed at Auschwitz during the holocaust, most of them shortly after arrival.
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.
Auschwitz-Birkenau is a concentration camp where Elie Wiesel, the author of "Night", and his father were imprisoned during the Holocaust. It was one of the most notorious Nazi death camps, where millions of Jews and other prisoners were systematically murdered. The brutal conditions and atrocities witnessed at Auschwitz-Birkenau are a central focus of the book.
blacks, women,homosexuals and comies
Total of 2,568,743 Jews were gassed and a total of other 3.5 million people in total was killed
Most died from the gas chambers or starvation.
Auschwitz was divided into three main camps—Auschwitz I, Auschwitz II (Birkenau), and Auschwitz III (Monowitz)—to serve different purposes. Auschwitz I was primarily a administrative center and a concentration camp for political prisoners, while Auschwitz II (Birkenau) was designed as a large extermination camp to facilitate mass killings. Auschwitz III (Monowitz) functioned as a labor camp, where inmates were forced to work in factories supporting the German war effort. This division allowed the Nazis to efficiently manage the systematic genocide and exploitation of prisoners.
Yes. From about April 1944 onward, the Hungarian government was in the hands of Hungarian Nazis. They sent most of the Hungarian Jews to Auschwitz and other camps to be used a slave labour or gassed. About 450,000 Hungarian Jews were killed in the Holocaust.
Auschwitz was was famous for having a concentration camp, where Jews, homosexuals, and other people that Hitler deemed "undesirable" were tortured, forced to work, and killed.
The number of people in the Auschwitz complex at any one time was relatively small by comparison with the total number killed there. According to Wikipedia, there were between 13,000 and 16,000 prisoners in Auschwitz at one time. At least 1.1 million people were killed at Auschwitz during the holocaust, most of them shortly after arrival.
According to several reports and other sources it's agreed between 1.1 Million and 1.35 Million People were killed at Auschwitz during the Holocaust. 90% of these victims were Jews.
GIRLS (not women) were often gassed immediately. Either that, or they died of typhus or some other disease.
There were extermination camps. These were where the Jews were sent to be gassed in gas chambers. The young children, elderly, and most women were sent straight to the extermination camps. Young, fit men worked at the camps doing things like cremating the gassed Jews in massive furnaces etc. When the men were too old or had no energy left in them they were too sent to the extermination camps.