Going through one of the worst genocides in history will change a life forever. Concentration camps were used to control the population of prisoners. They would be forced to suffer cruel punishment based on their religion and have all hope taken away. During the Holocaust, there were many differences in the way prisoners were treated and their living conditions at the camps that changed the lives of the Jews that were sent there.
Every concentration camp was different in the way they decided to deal with Jews. During the course of the Holocaust, many Jews from all over were forced into labor and worked until they no longer could. They moved frequently and had to decide whether they should fight to survive or give in to death. (Webb) Auschwitz was known as the Final Solution for prisoners. They were sent there to be killed. Auschwitz was separated into many sections that were always worse than the last. Prisoners were given the very minimum amount of food and were forced to suffer at the SS guards hands. They were worked at least 12 hours of the day, given horrible living conditions and were treated as animals, not humans. (“Auschwitz: The Camp of Death”). Mauthausen was the only category three camp which meant that prisoners were sent there to be tortured and exterminated. They would either be worked to death or be killed for the guard's enjoyment. (“Mauthausen Concentration Camp”). After registration, prisoners stripped down and were forced into the bathhouses. Their heads
What was it like to live in the time during the holocaust? What made the holocaust so revolutionary? Nazi leader, Adolf Hitler had a masterplan to eliminate the jews in Germany, the Nazis became powerful in a way that they saw the Jews as inferior. Through 1933 till 1945, roughly more than 11 million people were murdered. During the holocaust 1/3 of all Jewish people alive were persecuted. They created transit, concentration camps to monitor the Jews during the war. The concentration camps took away the rights of the victims as they were put through such traumatic experiences. The victims were racially discriminated to the point where they were treated poorly at the camps. Inmates were put through forced labor and were abused. This became
History is like a huge puzzle. People can keep find missing pieces to the story as they learn more about it. The Holocaust was one of those moments in history that has lead our minds to curiosity about why such a thing would occur at some point in time. For example, concentration camps. Concentration camps are one of those moments in history that make people’s jaws drop because of how flabbergasted they are to even hear of such a thing. Once you hear about one fact about the Holocaust and concentration camps you want to know every little detail about it to try and analyze what was happening and how it happened. Concentration camps in the Holocaust were a turning point in history because it lead to the deaths of millions of people.
During the Nazi Holocaust, multiple working and death camps were created to hold the captured Jews. While the Jews lived in this camp, they were tortured, mistreated, worked to death and eventually were put to death by either execution by firearm or were put into a death camp which exterminated the Jews using poison gas. The Nazi Party had developed many death camps in the central european area including the 6 death camps of Poland; Auschwitz, Treblinka, Belzec, Chelmno, Sobibor, and Majdanek.
Auschwitz was one of the most well-known concentration camps, a camp which held many prisoners who were often judged by their looks, race, and religion and not by their actions. In concentration camps people were forced to work and not given basic human rights. Auschwitz was by far the largest concentration camp during World War Two. It quickly gained a reputation for torture and harsh treatment of the prisoners. Auschwitz has a history that can give a person the chills from the horror of the mistreatment of prisoners.
Concentration camps was definitely not the best place for a person to be in. They put people in there who were detained or confined, and the prisoners were kept in extremely harsh conditions and they didn’t have any rights. According to https://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10005144he camps had a variety of different facilities which included labor camps, prisoner of war camps, transit camps, and camps that were killing centers, called
In the book Night written by Elie Wiesel, dehumanization is a large part of the lives of Jews in concentration camps. Night is a memoir capturing the memories of Eliezer Wiesel’s of his eight months of living in a concentration camp when he is fifteen years old. There, Wiesel along with the rest of the prisoners, are tortured everyday, being dehumanized physically, mentally, and spiritually until they are unrecognizable. Physically, inmates in concentration camps are brutalized like animals.
A Concentration Camp was a place where they held Jews and other prisoners which they treated very harshly. There were twenty three major concentration camps all over the world. Such as Poland, Germany, Netherlands, and France. Also there were Extermination Camps which is where mass murders occurred during this time. Some of these camps were called Belzec, Chelmno, and Majdanek. Even though they were treated poorly, some of the prisoners survived.
Imagine being pried away from your family. Not only that, but being left at the concentration camps, knowing that you are about to face the dreaded word “death”. Concentration camps broke people’s hearts and changed them forever. They had to encounter many terrifying and petrifying medical experiments. Alongside that, the so called “concentration camps” were basically almost becoming, or were, actual death camps. The things that they had to endure were heartbreaking and agonizing. They were starved from the moment that they got there until the end. If they were lucky, their concentration camp would’ve been liberated by the Allies. Most were not so lucky. During the Holocaust, many different concentration camps were built that were to change the lives of people forever.
Auschwitz was called the death camp. It was the largest concentration camp, and it had the largest prisoner population (Auschwitz). Nine out of ten prisoners in Auschwitz were Jewish (Auschwitz). Most prisoners that arrived at Auschwitz only survived for a few weeks, or months (Auschwitz). Jews died from starvation, medical experiments, gas chambers, diseases, and beatings. Jewish prisoners looked like walking skeletons because they were deprived from food, and water (Auschwitz). The prisoners, who were too weak to work, were sent to be killed in the gas chambers (Auschwitz). Some prisoners committed suicide by running into the electric fences (Auschwitz). Many people tried to escape, but only five hundred prisoners successfully escaped (Deem). It was nearly impossible to escape because the camp was surrounded by electrically charged barbed wire fences (Auschwitz). Auschwitz was also surrounded by SS guards equipped with machine guns (Auschwitz). Once the camp was liberated the SS
feet the security officers would create them shift it returning ten legs. They did all this just to be
When the Jewish first arrived to the camp, (tired, dirty, hungry, and thirsty from the train ride), they were immediately split into two separate groups men on one side and women and children on the other. After they were brutally separated from their families all of their personal belongings were taken away, and they were tested to see who could work and who was at this point, too weak. The weak workers were either shot or put into a gas chamber, while the strong workers moved on in the process. After tested for strength and endurance their heads were shaved (both men and women) and they got a number tattooed on there arm, to show what number prisoner they were. When that was over they6 were sent to the barracks, these were wooden or brick shacks full of 3 tiered bunks meant to comfortably hold 100-200 people. However there was an average of 700-800 people per barrack, or even more. The Jewish were fed 3 times a day, but it was a thin soup made of water and vegetable scraps (rotten bits, ends of vegetables, skins etc.) and bread made out of sawdust. Also the “prisoners” were forced to do grueling work such as carrying heavy bricks up a mountain or even collecting the dead bodies of their fellow religion, if they failed to do this work correctly or efficiently they would be beaten, shot, or gassed. By the end of the Holocaust, over 6 million Jewish people and 5 million
First, concentration camps were primarily made to control the what-so-called enemies of the state, that protested the Nazis. For example, the first concentration camp was set up in Germany to set up as detention centers to stop any opposition to the Nazis, and was set up all over Europe, but primarily Poland. The Nazis could now imprison their control when they were in control of Europe. Concentration camps held two purposes, which were to dehumanize and to demoralize, and some of these camps were also created to arrest people and forced labor under very harsh conditions. “The Holocaust was a watershed event in human history. In the aftermath of World War II, the world's individual nations to the United Nations confronted its legacy, when
There are many facts about Concentration Camps the reader would need to have in order to understand the event’s importance to new citizens. Important facts would include when and how the Holocaust arose, and how this led to the establishment of concentration camps. Knowing the Holocaust began in 1933 and it began because of antisemitism provides background information as to why concentration camps began. Learning about the experiences within concentration camps can provide a full understanding about the event’s importance. People were brought to be killed in many ways, whether that be instantly, or slowly. Some lucky ones even survived, and have been able to share with us the trauma we can all learn about today.
“The only place I could listen properly was in our dorm” “it was a sort of rule we couldn’t close dorm doors completely except for when we were sleeping (70, 71)
The forced labor that happened in the concentration camps was in 4 main camps. The concentration camps took in Jew prisoners for (money made/good thing received). They used men, women, and even kids. The concentration camps also became places/locations for the massmurders of small targeted groups mostly of the Jewish dead person.