Most prisoners at Buchenwald were forced laborers in local armaments factories. Prisoners were also used as test subjects for medical experiments at Buchenwald, which resulted in a large number of deaths.
it was horrible u had no food and u were beat to death if u wrent doing as u were told
there no answer & stop doing you homework on the internet
Many of the camps had satellite camps, some of which functioned for only fairly short periods of time. The Wikipedia article - see below - gives the names of the main camps and some information about the satellite camps.
At most of the extermination camps (as opposed to ordinary concentration camps) there was almost no 'daily life'. At Belzec the newly arrived Jews and Gypsies were gassed as soon as possible after arrival. The rail transports were timed in such a way as to avoid the need for much accommodation at the camp. (Occasionally, there were bottle-necks and the victims had to spend some time, seldom more than 24 hours, at the camp). One of the more revolting features of the Holocaust was the fact that some Jews were forced to help cremate or bury the corpses. These men did live at the camp. Note that there are only two (!) known survivors from Belzec, while at least 440,000 victims were murdered there. They were death camps - life was all but unbearable.
Most of the people sent to the concentration camps and death camps during the Holocaust were Jews. But other groups of individuals sent to the camps included homosexuals, gypsies, political opponents, those who hid and helped Jews, blacks, and resistance workers.
Prisoners in concentration camps did not have lives that were free. They starved, got sick, fell ill from exposure, wasted away and some died right on the spot when they were doing slave work. The only thing they could do was sing together, talk, pray and try to survive. Some were even killed just for talking, singing and praying.
it was really horrible for the people who went there. They had to do slave jobs and were killed if they stopped doing a job for even 1 minute. most people were gassed in the gas chambers and lots of people died in the concentration camps.
Yes for the germans because with the labour workers doing job such as agriculturing making raw materials
They were other forced into doing jobs for the Nazis, but if they weren't physically capable of doing so, they were either shot, or poisoned in false showers.
There isn't an exact number for Jewish children escaping the concentration camps. Children, the sick, and the elderly were the first to be sent into the gas chambers (killed) because they were of no use to the Nazis; they weren't capable of doing heavy work.
it was horrible u had no food and u were beat to death if u wrent doing as u were told
there no answer & stop doing you homework on the internet
Many of the camps had satellite camps, some of which functioned for only fairly short periods of time. The Wikipedia article - see below - gives the names of the main camps and some information about the satellite camps.
A blockalteste was a block leader in the concentration camps. There were either the German Soldiers assigned to be a block leader of a block of buildings or a prisoner assigned to do the duty.
At most of the extermination camps (as opposed to ordinary concentration camps) there was almost no 'daily life'. At Belzec the newly arrived Jews and Gypsies were gassed as soon as possible after arrival. The rail transports were timed in such a way as to avoid the need for much accommodation at the camp. (Occasionally, there were bottle-necks and the victims had to spend some time, seldom more than 24 hours, at the camp). One of the more revolting features of the Holocaust was the fact that some Jews were forced to help cremate or bury the corpses. These men did live at the camp. Note that there are only two (!) known survivors from Belzec, while at least 440,000 victims were murdered there. They were death camps - life was all but unbearable.
Most of the people sent to the concentration camps and death camps during the Holocaust were Jews. But other groups of individuals sent to the camps included homosexuals, gypsies, political opponents, those who hid and helped Jews, blacks, and resistance workers.
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.