1, 3). The prisoners were from an estimated 20 different nationalities, with roughly ⅓ of them being Jewish (Nawyn par.3). According to Vadasz, approximately 20,000 prisoners became casualties of the war (par. 1). The inmates were either worked to death, died of disease, or were hanged for trying to escape the camp. On May 6th of 1945, the camp was liberated by American soldiers (Nawyn par. 1, 3,). One of the soldiers, COL Polk, wrote home to his wife that "Truly, we have been fighting a holy war as our Chaplain has said. Such sights and such tragedy leave little time for rejoicing. I'm simply drained of emotion by it all. The taste of it is still in my mouth" (qtd. in Nawyn par.
1, 3). The prisoners were from an estimated 20 different nationalities, with roughly ⅓ of them being Jewish (Nawyn par.3). According to Vadasz, approximately 20,000 prisoners became casualties of the war (par. 1). The inmates were either worked to death, died of disease, or were hanged for trying to escape the camp. On May 6th of 1945, the camp was liberated by American soldiers (Nawyn par. 1, 3,). One of the soldiers, COL Polk, wrote home to his wife that "Truly, we have been fighting a holy war as our Chaplain has said. Such sights and such tragedy leave little time for rejoicing. I'm simply drained of emotion by it all. The taste of it is still in my mouth" (qtd. in Nawyn par.