Most were in the area formerly known as the 'Pale of Settlement', the largest concentration was in what the Nazis called 'General Government'.
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.
Answer The Jews had been confined in an area of Warsaw that was referred to as the "ghetto". The Warsaw Uprising began on 1 August 1944 when the Germans began rounding up the Jews and sending them to concentration camps.
Actually their method varied by areas. In Poland for example, they would pass legislation restricting where Jews could live, forming a ghetto that could be walled in. In Russia, they would just post a notice that all Jews within a certain area were required to assemble at a prescribed location from which they would board the deportation trains
In concentration camps, most Jews were worked and starved to death. The "camps" were not all the same. Transit camps like Westbrook outside of Amsterdam generally shipped it's unfortunate victims straight to Auschwitz-Birkenau--a death camp.. The "Camps" were gradations of probable death. Jewish Ghettos were also a part of The Final Solution. They were set up by the Nazis in any area with a population larger than a village or small town (The Warsaw Ghetto is the most well known) -- This was a horrible step before Jews were sent to death, concentration or a transit camp.
a torrent of restrictons. property of the Jews were seized without compensation. business' were destroyed. Jew were prohibited to travel or live outside a certain area. they were denied employment and to practice a trade or render service to non Jews.......Most Jews were placed in concentrations camps where about 20 million were killed................
fluids move from the area higher concetration to lower concetration.
they all died
A ghetto was a part of a city, especially a slum area, occupied by a minority group or groups. The Nazis, in WW2, force Jews, and others they considered as undesirables into such ghettos.
About one third of European Jews were still alive at the end of World War 2. Many of them, such as Jews in Britain and Sweden were never in any danger of being sent to extermination camps ... Many French , Belgian and Italian Jews were protected in various ways ... In the Soviet Union, Jews who managed to stay behind Soviet army lines were not in danger, either.The number of Jews that survived extermination camps is numbered in hundreds (if that), but the number that survived labour camps is higher.Certainly. There were tens of thousands that survived. I've personally met at least two of them. If there is a holocaust museum in your area, there may be opportunities to listen to them tell their stories.Yes, there were. There were many people who wrote books about their experiences in the concentration camps.
The area of Camps-la-Source is 22.47 square kilometers.
The area of Camps-en-Amiénois is 4,540,000.0 square meters.
The area of Camps-sur-l'Agly is 26.35 square kilometers.
The area of Camps-sur-l'Isle is 3,020,000.0 square meters.
When Hitler gained he enforced strict laws on Jews that just kept getting harsher and harsher. Ghettos were usally a sectioned of area in a major city suronded by barbed wire fences and gaurded by Nazis. Ghettos were the place were all the Jews and other undesireables being persecuted by Hitler were sent. These places were impoverished and filthy. People lived and worked in the ghettos but many were forced to do cruel jobs ebforced by the Nazis. When the ghettos got to full the Jews were rounded up and sent to concentration camps. Before the Jews were sent to the concentration camps they were sent to transit camps. Transit camps were where Jews stayed until they were sent to the concentration camp. It was sort of a sorting ground like some may have been sent to Auschwitz well others were sent to Birkenau. Transit camps were similar to concentration camps but the conditions were significanty better. To learn more about this topic and the holocaust I encourage you to visit United States Holocaust Memorial Museum at USHMM.org
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.
The area of Camps-Saint-Mathurin-Léobazel is 34.08 square kilometers.
Answer The Jews had been confined in an area of Warsaw that was referred to as the "ghetto". The Warsaw Uprising began on 1 August 1944 when the Germans began rounding up the Jews and sending them to concentration camps.