Buchenwald Concentration Camp was one of the many concentration camps, Just because it wasn't well-known doesn't mean it isn't important to know about and how they dehumanized many Jews. Life for the Jews was difficult not just because of the labor, Starvation and having bad hygiene was one of the many ways that Jews had to live threw while in Buchenwald. They were used as test subjects by the doctors that were there and were also starved, the guard made them go as long as 8 days without food and when they did give them food it was told to be made with rats. Diseases spread quickly because of the poor hygiene in the camp so many Jews died in the camp because of the lack of hygiene (buchenwaldtheconcentrationcamp.weebly.com/what-was-life-like.html).…
The majority of Auschwitz victims died in Auschwitz-Birkenau. It was the largest mass murdering concentration camp in history. Auschwitz-Birkenau was the most unwanted place to go even though prisoners didn’t know where they were going when they were being deported. Many victims died in Auschwitz-Birkenau and today that camp is a reminder of the horrible events that took place during the Holocaust.…
There were hundreds, if not thousands of death camps settled across Europe during World War II. But despite the word “death camps”, a term that is used to describe the horrible events of the Holocaust, the historic mass killing of around six million Jews or more. These were more of working camps, but still, out of all of those, only six of them were used specifically for actually working the Jews to death. Belzec, Chelmno, Majdanek, Sobibor, as well as Treblinka were quite large, but none of those five are as large or as infamous as the Auschwitz death camp. Through the beginning of the 1941 to around 1945, the camp has gone from 835 square feet of absolute horror to true historical suffering and terror that won’t, and shouldn’t, be forgotten.…
There were a few different parts of the Auschwitz concentration camp. Furthermore, it was three different types of camps that were brought together: concentration camp, extermination, and labor camp (“Auschwitz was the largest camp”). All three camps played a major part in the Nazi’s “final solution” (Berenbaum). There were also subcamps part of Auschwitz. In just two years, 44 subcamps were built (1942 to 1944). Auschwitz also had different leaders. The first of the three leaders who controlled all of the Auschwitz concentration camps was SS Lieutenant Colonel Rudolf Hoess (“The Auschwitz concentration camp complex”).Meanwhile, there were many things inside of Auschwitz. For instance, Auschwitz contained electrically charged barbed wire, machine…
Nazi Germany set up camps with a specific design that would help them eliminate and torture those unlike them, mostly Jews, and one of these camps was called Auschwitz. The Auschwitz camps were located in Southern Germany and were the largest camps made by Nazi Germany. The camps were located near train tracks, so…
Concentration camps were created by Hitler and the Nazis to get rid of the Jewish people. Nazis thought Jews were disliked by Nazis. There are two main purposes to demoralize and dehumanize…
Along with concentration camps there were also a few death or extermination camps. These types of camps were used to “exterminate jews” (Extermination Camps). Few people in these camps came out alive. They were tortured and worked more than the regular concentration camps. Death camps were much worse than concentration camps because people were sent there not to just be held prisoner but to be killed.…
There were four different types of camps during The Holocaust; Concentration Camps, Transit Camps, Work/Labor Camps, and Extermination Camps. Although they were not useful all of the camps had their own purpose. The Concentration camps are a place where people are kept or confined without trial. “Prisoners were kept in…
Concentration Camps or Extermination Camps were special bodies set up for the mass extermination of Jews and other undesirables. At the Wansee Conference in 1942 the 'Final Solution' was agreed upon: the mass extermination of Jews. At first the Nazis used Death Squads who killed by shooting and bombs but this method proved to time taxing and Hitler was also worried about the mental wellbeing of the soldiers. Concentration Camps were set up instead. Internees would be transported from the ghettoes to these camps were practically dead on arrival. Inmates were gassed using Hydrogen…
In the beginning of time men fought with sticks and stones. World War I brought a step change in technology with the occurrence of poison gas, machine guns, and armored tanks. Previous to World War I foot soldiers and horses were used to advance on the enemy. Chemical warfare had never been used before World War I. With this deadly and often inhuman use of chemical warfare, those exposed died painful and excruciating deaths. The machine gun was invented in 1884 but wasn't used in warfare until World War I. This invention allowed for rapid firing and therefore was able to kill or injure many more enemies during a single battle. The armored tank led to the advancement of heavy gun fire while protecting the gunman. Poison gas, machine guns, and…
In 1933, Adolf Hitler lead a deadly regime that led to the Holocaust. His plan was to kill anyone that was unfit to the Aryan race including Jews, gypsies, and mentally ill people. Undesirables were forced to work in brutal concentration camps where they were malnourished, tortured, and worked in inhumane conditions. The most notorious camp was Auschwitz which had three parts named Auschwitz One, Birkenau, and Monowitz. Auschwitz One was the largest camp, with over one million people losing their lives there. If an individual were to be immediately sent to death, they were directly sent to Birkenau. Lastly, many German Jews were sent to Monowitz because it was less intense labor and overall treatment was…
Bergen-Belsen was another concentration camp. It served as a holding camp for Jewish prisoners. Bergen-Belsen was built to hold only 10,000 prisoners but by the end of the war it held 60,000 prisoners. Bergen-Belsen conditions were good as far as concentration camp conditions go. It didn’t force most of its prisoners into forced labor like most of the other camps. It also contained no gas chambers. This is also the camp where Anne Frank and her sister Margot were. However, they later died of typhus in March,…
Jews who were taken also went to a concentration camp. Auschwitz, near Kraków, was the largest death camp. (“Holocaust”). Victims of Auschwitz came from all around Europe.(“Holocaust”) Some Auschwitz inmates were medical experiments. Other inmates were starved, shot, or gassed routinely.…
Auschwitz I was constructed on April, 1940 and was the largest Nazi concentration and extermination camp during World War II in southern Poland. It was located on a former military base in a town near Krakow. During the time in which the camp was constructed, near by homes and factories were forcefully evacuated and then were demolished by the Nazis with bulldozers. The first officer in charge of Auschwitz was Rudolf Höss who previously had helped run the Sachsenhausen concentration camp in Oranienburg, Germany. Auschwitz I was constructed for three main purposes. It was originally conceived as a concentration camp, only to be used as a detention center for Polish citizens arrested after Germany took over the country in 1939. The camp included anti-Nazi activists, politicians, scientists and many other individuals that the Nazi simply did not like for either race or gender. Upon Hitlers Final Solution of getting rid of all the Jews, it was undeniable that Auschwitz was deemed to hell and was bound to became an ideal death camp. Despite all that, not all those…
The concentration camps were created in 1933-1945 by Hitler and the Nazis. Auschwitz was the largest concentration camp. Hitler and the Nazis made Jews and people they did not like build the camps. It was a harsh time for Jews because they went into hiding, living in poor conditions. People got diseases because they had no food which is a reason why most of them died. The disease of what they died from is called typhus. It was hard to leave because they had numbers on them.…