A few survivors in 1945 had been in camps for 8-9 years or longer, but that was very unusual.
the danish resistance helped the Jewish people by helping them find food they might go fishing for them, in ww2 they helped them by helping them get to Sweden where the Germans had not yet taken over. a specific book called number the stars" shows the story of a little girl and her family helping the Jews escape from the Germans who were hunting them down and sending them to concentration camps where they would die of starvation or get killed with acid or gas in supposedly showers.
Well, before second World War, many Germans were very poor, due to world war 1. Hitler invented many logical, good things in Germany. He also gave the Germans their proudness (haha new word) of Germany back, which they eventually lost again, which hasn't come back so far. Many people looked up to him, and believed him, when he told everybody stuff like the need of a second war. A lot of people started to stop think themselves and thought of him as their hero. Others didn't like him, but understood they could not easily survive, without worshipping him. Today, most of the Germans are ashamed, and extremely sensitive about anything reminding them of solidarity to their land. This is only now coming back, with sport teams and that stuff
Yes he did survive the war
yes he did survive ww1.
Dr. Viktor Frankl was not a Nazi. He was a Jewish psychologist imprisoned in a Nazi concentration camp along with his wife and unborn child, neither of whom survived. Dr. Frankl did survive the camps and went on to write a moving memoir of his experiences, "Man's Search for Meaning".
They did. Her family was found and sent to concentration camps. Her father is the only one to survive the war.
The war was World War II, but she didn't actually survive it. She died a prisoner in Bergen Belsen concentration camp, of typhoid in 1943 or 1944.
Miep Gies was not sent to a concentration camp.
By not being gassed.
kitty fish
21 if thuggin
Circa Survive writes its own music.
definitely not the head!
In Elie Wiesel's book "Night," the Polish prisoner in charge of the block advised Elie to lie about his age and occupation to avoid selection for death in the concentration camp. He also warned Elie about the importance of staying strong and holding onto hope in order to survive the horrors they were facing.
Musculoskeletal
Chuck Norris.
Probably in the palm of your hand.