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2006-12-14 08:48:25 · 13 answers · asked by Jmeシ 1 in Arts & Humanities History

13 answers

For the guards, it was great. For the doctors and such, they too were largely okay. For the prisoners, though, there was starvation and all the disorders that comes from depression and malnutrition. For those in the medical experiments, they fared a little better for a while. Often they were kept around to see the limits of human endurance. There were the vacuum chambers to simulate high altitudes. There was the freezing to see just how long sailors in the water or soldiers in the field could live at different temperatures. Then there were the drug tests for effectiveness and dosage to seperate between that which causes pain and agony and that which causes death. Then for the allied troops that marched in, there was a lot of wretching and crying and seething anger at what they found.

Then too, for the locals in the nearby town by that name it was life as usual. That about covers the range, don't you think?

2006-12-14 09:00:28 · answer #1 · answered by Rabbit 7 · 0 0

Dysentery was the most common illness and malnutrition followed shortly after that, this was after the first 2 weeks. Peopled live in barracks designed for 48 horses but held at least 400 humans.
I got this info from a book called "The World Must Know" it is a history of the Holocaust
and has a lot of gruesome pictures and stories of the horribleness of it all.

2006-12-14 09:14:49 · answer #2 · answered by Ammy 6 · 0 0

Obama's grate uncle, Charlie Payne, helped to launch Buchenwald no longer Auschwitz he became into indoors the 89th Infantry branch which On April 4, 1945 overran Ohrdruf, a subcamp of the Buchenwald concentration camp. Ohrdruf became into the 1st Nazi concentration camp liberated by making use of making use of U.S. troops in Germany.

2016-10-14 23:06:53 · answer #3 · answered by dusik 4 · 0 0

People did not get nearly enough nutrition that they needed for the work they were doing. There was a lot of diseases going around that weren't being treated and would just get passed from one person to the next, and as the prisoners were not getting enough nutrition they're immune system wasn't able to fight off even the less serious diseases. I imagine that the water was not clean so many would get sick because of that. And obviously there was no doctors that would treat the prisoners...if you were sick you'd most likely die from the illness or get forced into a gas chamber.

2006-12-14 09:01:30 · answer #4 · answered by rockergirl20032003 4 · 0 0

Because of the unsanitary conditions typhus a disease spread by lice was a constant killer. As the war worsened for Germany malnutrition and associated ailments took its toll on the health of the prisoners. Rather than treat the sickness, anyone on the sick list was gassed.

2006-12-14 10:54:17 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Are you serious? Either you are completely ignorant or brain dead to be asking such a question.

Why don't you watch a few movies about the Holocaust, even Schindler's List itself, to answer your question.

Un-*******-believable!

2006-12-14 09:00:47 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

you mean during the holocaust? Auschwitz was describe as DEATH FACTORY.

2006-12-14 08:56:07 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

What was the health like in Auscwitz????

2006-12-14 20:48:39 · answer #8 · answered by gbgnick 3 · 1 0

Here's a clue.........Auschwitz II was a death camp.

2006-12-14 09:16:16 · answer #9 · answered by the_lipsiot 7 · 1 0

Seriously? You know it was a DEATH CAMP right? I'm going to have say it wasn't really good.

2006-12-15 04:25:22 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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