Jews, Poles, Russian POW's, gypsies, mentally ill, physically handicapped, criminals, homosexuals, basically anyone who wasn't German and wasn't part of Hitler's ideal of the Aryan race.
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In concentrations camps run by the Nazi's bodies were incinerated or buried in huge mass graves.
Yes, either that or some other system for housing large numbers of prisoners. But, as it was the Nazis who were in power they would chose who to imprison, and perhaps were unjust in their choice.
The prisoners' clothing was recycled.
There were NOT 77 concentration camps in Denmark
'rooms'.
Sawdust filled bread, and thin watery soup. Alot of the time it was something always rotten, all the good food went to the gaurds.
prisoners the free and camps consentration the enter us the did year what 1945
Croatian Association of Prisoners in Serbian Concentration Camps was created in 1995.
In the Auschwitz group of camps (which by 1943 included 45 subcamps) prisoners used as labourers were tattoed, whether Jews or non-Jews). So this would have included the non-Jewish Polish prisoners. At other camps, the prisoners were generally not tattooed.
Able bodied prisoners had to work as slave labourers.
Death camps were built to kill prisoners systematically