Several of them did. The letter preceding the number was the camp identifier, "A" for Auschwitz, etc.
depends on what their parents say.
They just lived with them. There was nothing else they could do.
Death marches transported Jews from concentration camp to concentration camp as the Allies neared.
65,000 Jews were killed.
Because the war was approaching the camps and they had to put the Jews somewhere.
All the Jews they took they put them in the same camp they just separated the boys and the girls.
The tattoos consisted of a letter and a number.
star of david
Auschwitz was an extermination camp, NOT a labor camp. All they did was bring in Jews, cut their hair, then put them in line to die.
No, the tattoos were permanent.
Bernard Lictenberg
depends on what their parents say.
Mostly Jews and Polish Jews
They Would Mistreat The Jews :(
Well the numering was like a ID number to keep track of all of the Jews or prisoners. Its like your name but, with numbers for them.
The prohibition against tattoos is in Leviticus 19:28 which states: "You shall not make cuts in your flesh for a person [who died]. You shall not etch a tattoo on yourselves. I am the Lord." At that time, tattoos were often a part of the worship practices of idolaters and therefore was a practice not allowed for Jews.
Emmanuel Alper was never sent to a concentration camp. He, his mother, and his sister were put in the ghetto in his home town. Later on, they were put in a line with thousands of other Jews and shot and murdered by the Germans in 1942.