What did Jews slaves do in concentration camps?
Answer-The Germans were doing what they was told to do unless they would die they worked at train stations and saw the millions of Jewish on them and didn't say or do squirt about it some Germans raped the Jewish for fun and killed the baby's and f***** the Jewish woman's life
What happened to the Jews who couldn't find a hiding place?
it depends upon where they were and when it was, the closer to the end of the war, the less likely that there would be a trial. The further east it was, the less likely that the sentence would be lenient.
What was Hitler's plan called to eliminate European Jews?
The Final Solution was the name of the plan.
The Allies knew of the final solution through intel, but thought it was a military plan, not plans for the Holocaust.
What effect did the Holocaust have on Palestine?
There was no Israel during the holocaust. The holocaust occurred during World War II. Israel was not founded until after the war was over.
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In the Middle East the German army did not reach Cairo or the Suez Canal and so do not enter the territory of the city of Palestine.
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Hitler made an agreement with the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem in which he agreed to do what he could to prevent Jews getting into Palestine.
What concentration camp did Otto frank have to go to?
When did the Nazis stop killing in concentration camps?
Most of them had to wait till they were liberated, one by one, by the Allies.
The concentration camps all ended at different times because there were more than one so there is no official date that thy ended because there were tales that not all of them were shut down and there were a few that were kept secret.
This probably discusses World War 2. A number of Christians hid the Jews. Pastor Martin Niemoeller, was upset because there were only 50 Protestant Pastors in the concentration camp with him for assisting the Jews in their attempts to escape the Holocaust while there were 450 Roman Catholic Pastors. About 3,500 Protestant Pastors were killed for trying to help Jews escape the Holocaust. A number of Roman Catholic Priests were killed. Still, the safest place for a Jew to go was to a Roman Catholic Priest. They knew the routes that took the Jews from one Parish House to the next. Once the Jews were in Romania, they were safe from Hitler. They went from Romania to Palestine which became Israel. Of course a number were caught and many Roman Catholic priests were killed. An alternative route was up through protestant Denmark to Sweden.
Why didn't the Jew s fight back in the holocaust?
Some Jews did fight back. In some cases, they did so by escaping to the woods and fighting with Slavic (usually Russian) partisans. In other cases, they did so in ghetto riots, the most famous being the Warsaw Ghetto uprising which took over a month for the Nazis to quell. In still other cases, they used subterfuge and rebellion in the Concentration Camps and Death Camps, such as the Sonderkommando Riot. However, the strength of those Jews who resisted was vastly inferior to the firepower and manpower that the Nazis employed to viciously respond to the insurrections.
What types of laws were made against the Jews in World War 2?
The privileges of the Jews were shrinking slowly. At first, they had to wear yellow badges to let people know that they were Jewish. Then the Germans told them that they could not leave their homes after a set time. They then continued to limit them by not allowing them to own businesses unless the business was managed by a non-Jew. Jewish children were forbidden to enter public playgrounds, schools, swimming pools, and museums. Then as they took away more and more of their human rights, they placed all Jews into the Ghettos. They told them it would be a safe place for them to stay until the war was over.
Was it only Jews killed in the Holocaust?
Simple answer: Yes, since you used the term "Final Solution" in your question.
The full term is: "The Final Solution to the JewishQuestion." It's not clear exactly when this term was coined or by whom (some scholars credit Adolf Eichmann, at the Wannsee Conference in January 1942), but during what is generally termed "The Holocaust," the period from approximately November 9-10, 1938 (Kristallnacht, or the Night of Broken Glass) to the end of World War 2 in Europe in May of 1945, approximately 6 million European Jews were deliberately murdered by the Nazi regime in Germany for the sole reason that they were of Jewish extraction.
As the German Army conquered territories after 1939, right behind them would come the Einsatzgruppen, special death squads of the SS whose task it was to find and kill, primarily Jews, and others deemed "undesirables" by the Nazi regime.
The question gets a little stickier when we try to put the terms "Final Solution" and "Holocaust" together. There is no doubt that "Final Solution" referred to the Jews alone, but scholars are mixed on whether "Holocaust" applies only to Jews, or includes the other approximately 5 million non-Jewish people murdered by the Nazis because they were ...
* Slavs (especially Soviet POWS) * Gypsies (Roma and Sinti) * Disabled and/or mentally ill * Homosexuals * Freemasons * Jehovah's Witnesses ... Or anyone else the Nazis thought they could define as Untermenschen (literally "undermen" or subhuman). Some scholars exclude non-Jews from the Holocaust, others include them, but the fact remains that the evidence shows that the Germans and some other Europeans under the Nazis made a concerted attempt to kill everyone they didn't like, starting and ending with, always above all, the Jews.
What kind of medical experiments did the Nazis do on Jews?
To see if the body could be horrifically manipulated and still survive, bone and
muscle transplantation (without use of pain killer), experiments on how to treat
hypothermia and prevent it (These experiments included making prisoners stay
submerged in ice water for five hours, placing them naked outside for hours with
temps as low as -6 deg), treatment and prevention of malaria( Healthy inmates
were infected by mosquitoes or by injections of extracts of the mucous glands of
female mosquitoes. After contracting the disease, the subjects were treated with
various drugs to test their relative efficiency. Over 1,000 people were used in these
experiments, and of those, more than half died as a result.Mustard Gas Experiments
- How to treat wounds inflicted from mustard gas, by gassing Jews
Sulfonimide Experiments, Sea water experiments, Sterilization Experiments, and
Experiments with poison, Incendiary bomb experiments, High Altitude Experiments
twin experiments- seeing is they could sow twins together and other experiments
of that nature
the Nazis preformed experiments on many people not just the Jews for instance
an 11 or 12 year old boy was taken from his house in Poland tied to a chair and
hit on the head with a hammer every few seconds
How did Hitler feel about the Jews?
He believed in particular:
All this points to a rag-bag of inconsistent beliefs and conspiracy theories.
The holocaust in the sense of systematic exterminationlasted from 1941 till 1945. (Jews had been persecuted in Germany since 1933).
June 1941 (with the start of the activities of the mobile killing units behind German lines in the Soviet Union) till May 1945, when the last concentration camps were liberated.
How many lives were lost due to death marches in the Holocaust?
The Death Marches took place between 1944 and 1945. Prisoners were forced to march for tens of miles in the snow to travel from camp to camp. No one really knows ho many people survived these marches but what is known is that around 250,000 Jews died during the marches.
Yes. Auschwitz was #1 an extermination camp for men, women and children and also #2 a slave labour camp for women as well as men.
List five restrictions these laws placed on German Jews?
Jews had to go to a different school, and they couldn't be in some public places, they had to wear the star of David, and they couldn't be in another non-Jewish home. theses are a few of the many restrictions that the Jews faced.
How did Hitler affect the lives of the Jews?
Many carried the psychological scars for the remainder of their lives. They lost loved ones, and were brutaly injured and killed mercilessly. They lost all they had worked for, and treated no better than animals. Racism destroyed their lives, They died in agony. They were stacked and burnt, cut and beat all for pleasure of the Nazi's.
Jewish people have, at various times throughout their long history, been forced to wear various symbols identifying themselves as Jewish. The most famous of these would be the yellow Star of David, with the word JUDEN in the middle, which they had to wear at all times in Nazi Germany.
What were the names of 2 Famous Concentration camps?
It is known that Germans built over 2000 camps and sub-camps in occupied Europe. Auschwitz is the most famous but which is second best known varies. Bergen-Belsen or Majdanek is likely the second best known.
How were the Jews treated up to 1940?
Assimilated Jews were barely tolerated.
Orthodox Jews were were ridiculed despised and hated.
Ordinary, working class Jews were needed, tolerated and held in a state of limbo.
Germany's Nuremberg laws made them all equal.
How many people dies during holocaust?
Some scholars maintain that the definition of the word Holocaust should also include the Nazis' systematic murder of millions of people in other groups, including ethnic Poles, the Roma, Soviet civilians, Soviet prisoners of war, people with disabilities, homosexuals, Jehovah's Witnesses, and other political and religious adherents. By this definition, the total number of Holocaust victims would be between 11 million and 17 million people.
Answer:The above does not address the question. The answer to the question is: Six million Jewish people died in the Holocaust.What was the diffference between a Ghetto and a concentration Camp during the Holocaust in war once?
Nothing in principle but in practice a ghetto was an area of an existing town separated from the rest of the town and a concentration camp was a prison built for the purpose, usually well away from a town.
What groups other than Jews did Hitler murder?
Hitler had most of the common racial prejudices of his time. So other groups he detested included Blacks and Aboriginies. He disliked the Slavs and took a dim view of the peoples of southern Europe, too. Hitler hated the gypsies ('Roma') and they were subject to extermination, like the Jews. He also loathed the Russians.
What did Hitler do when people spoke out against him?
After World War I (1914-1918), nationalist, right-wing political movements in Germany and Austria tended to see the nation in collective terms as a Volksgemeinschaft or national community. Racist nationalists on the extreme right of the political spectrum saw this collective as a voelkische Gemeinschaft, by which they meant a racial group that they considered superior. Adolf Hitler and the Nazis, among other radical right-wing groups, adopted this view of the German nation.
-UnitedStatesHolocaustMuseum-