During the selection process, there would be S.S. men waiting for the prisoners to arrive from the train. Then they would separate everyone by gender into two lines. Then the S.S. men would point either to the right or left. Whichever way it was, one side was where you can live for a couple of weeks and forced to work in harsh labor which ranged from age fourteen to age sixty. The other way they pointed was where many infants, prenant mothers, unfit people, elderly, weaklers, etc... met their deaths which were the gas chambers. They would be forced to undress completely and then make their way into the gas chambers. Those who lived were assigned numbers and assigned barracks. Unfortunetly, they too met their deaths and by the end of the Holocaust, only a little more than a thousand survivors lived.
(Sidenote)- sometimes prisoners would end up just heading straight into gas chambers because that camp was a killing center alone or others went to concentration camps because that alone was just one camp for forced labor.
Around 200,000 political prisoners were systematically murdered during the Holocaust.
Yes.
2 hours
They were very soon killed.
none. the holocaust was for jewish people,gays,or POW prisoners. the only aryans that died was in battle during WW2.
Around 200,000 political prisoners were systematically murdered during the Holocaust.
Yes there were many, many female prisoners during the Holocaust.
The SS.
Ghettos with the children and men.
Yes.
The head of Wiesel's block advises the prisoners to run in order to avoid being chosen during the selection process. He instructs them to make themselves unseen or unnoticed by the SS officers conducting the selections.
Selection in night is a novel written by Elie Wiesel that portrays the process of prisoners being chosen for labor or extermination in Nazi concentration camps during the Holocaust. This brutal method involved separating individuals based on their physical condition and ability to work, often leading to the death of those deemed unfit. It highlights the dehumanizing nature of the camps and the arbitrary cruelty of the selection process.
there were camps across occupied Europe.
they got an extra coat
2 hours
"Merciless selection" refers to the process during the Holocaust where SS officers would select which prisoners were fit to work and which would be sent to the gas chambers. This dehumanizing practice would often separate families and lead to the immediate execution of those deemed unfit. Elie Wiesel vividly describes his own experience of this brutal selection process in his memoir "Night."
During the Holocaust, the Nazis targeted seven major groups: Jews, Romas (gypsies), homosexuals, Slavs, mentally and physically handicapped, Jehovah's Witnesses, and Soviet Prisoners of war.