They have to beat em up, beat em up, then switch peanut butter.
labor and concentration camps
Women either got gassed in the chambers or brought bodies out of the gas chambers. ___ Work done by women in concentration camps included: * Quarrying * Work in German armaments factories * Chemicals
On May 3rd 2010, I heard a holocaust survivor named Dr. Alexander White at my school. He was saved by the schindler's list. He has a memoir called Be A Mensch. It is named that because that was the last thing he heard his father say to him before he was shipped off to a concentration camp and killed. He says it means to be a special human being that has integrity and honor. To be helpful and kind. To behave. To follow the ten commandments. To have a good character. Not to be evil.
* Transit camps, where prisoners were held till they were moved to other kinds of camps. * Concentration Camps, Grade I - for example, Dachau. * Concentration Camps, Grade II - for example, Buchenwald. (These were harsher than Grade I camps and there was less food than at Grade I camps). * Concentration Camps, Grade III - for example, Auschwitz I and III. (Harsher and with less food than in Grade II camps - very high death rates). * Extermination camps - most of Auschwitz II (Birkenau), Treblinka II, Belzec, Chelmno, Sobibor, Maly Trostenets and one section of Majdanek. These camps were designed as killing centres and nothing else. In addition, there were also concentration camps for 'difficult children' (!) aged 12+ and later even 2+ ...
yes they killed any kind of Jewish age didnt matter. New Answer: i also heard that they riped the limbs of the babies and through them in the streets. Dont know if its true, but i heard about it
It was a concentration camp.
The French girl in the concentration camp is kind to Wiesel and his father by offering them bread and giving them words of encouragement.
Extermination/Labour camp
Auschwitz was a concentration camp.concentration and extermination camp
Bergen-Belsen was a concentration camp. It was NOT a death camp.
Jewish people
Elie Wiesel describes his father as brave, kind, and loving. He sees his father as a source of strength and support during their time in the concentration camps, despite the hardships they face. Wiesel portrays his father as a symbol of resilience and familial love in the face of unimaginable suffering.
Meir Katz is a Jewish man from Sighet who joins the same transport as Elie Wiesel and his father when they are deported to Auschwitz. He is a powerful and kind-hearted man who tries to keep morale up among the prisoners during their journey. Katz later dies in the concentration camp.
Many kind of questions you could ask but my 3 are 1. How was it like being in a concentration camp 2. What was you force to do whiles you was in the concentration camp 3. Did you witness 1st hand of seeing someone being killed
One conflict in "Night" by Elie Wiesel is the internal struggle Elie faces as he grapples with his faith in God in the face of extreme suffering in the concentration camps. Another conflict is the physical and emotional torment endured by Elie and his fellow prisoners as they struggle to survive and maintain their humanity in the brutal conditions of the Holocaust.
Elie's father was a respected leader in the Jewish community before they were deported to concentration camps. He served as the head of the Jewish council in their town, responsible for representing and managing the affairs of the Jewish population.
Auschwitz Concentration Camp in Poland used Zyklon B gas in their gas chambers afterwards creamated the bodies.