There are four interpretations that were expressed at the time. There were that it was part of God's plan and that they should wait until the whole plan was revealed, that it was their turn to suffer as their forefathers had suffered before them, God was punishing them for not being pious enough and that God was dead.
The Nazis were involved in the concentration camp Buchenwald because it was a camp for political prisoners.
it was a prison of war camp a camp were they took members of army from there rivals and kept them prisoners
Ravensbrück was an all-female camp and had some of the very worst female camp guards.
The majority of prisoners of war (POWs) were Allied airmen, whose planes crashed in Occupied France, Belgium or Holland. Anyone who supported the German forces would report these airmen to their local authoritary, and troops or police officers would be sent to round them up.
John N. Patterson was commandant of the Point Lookout POW camp for most of its existence. The camp was built to hold 10,000 men but the population often swelled to between 12,000 and 20,000 after the exchange of prisoners was halted. 50,000 men were prisoners there at one time or another, and over 4,000 died.
Camps for political prisoners have been called a detention center, a concentration camp, prisoner of war camp, labor camp, or gulag.
The Soviet Union
The Nazis were involved in the concentration camp Buchenwald because it was a camp for political prisoners.
prisoners usually.
Please clarify: Civil inmates? Prisoners of War? Concentration Camp Prisoners?
it was a prison of war camp a camp were they took members of army from there rivals and kept them prisoners
Yes, prisoners at the Flossenbürg concentration camp were tattooed. In many concentration camps, including Flossenbürg, prisoners were marked with a series of numbers as a means of identification. These tattoos were typically placed on the prisoner's forearm.
Amersfoort was a Nazi concentration camp. Between 1941 and 1945 there were over 35,000 prisoners that were kept in the camp.
Ravensbrück was an all-female camp and had some of the very worst female camp guards.
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.
Because Auschwitz was the toughest concentration camp in the world at that moment.
Andersonville.