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I just have a question: If six million people had been incinerated by the Nazis, what happened to the ashes?

Just wondering...

2007-03-23 14:02:29 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Cultures & Groups Other - Cultures & Groups

I'm not making any major statements, I just want to know what happened to the ashes, please serious answers only

2007-03-23 14:03:33 · update #1

edward, if you say so

2007-03-23 14:09:54 · update #2

I'm hoping that all answers have substantial evidence to back them up

2007-03-23 14:10:34 · update #3

flossie, that's gross if they did that

2007-03-23 14:11:40 · update #4

dude, i have others but are you really going to spit in my face, over a statement on the...internet, lol. Good luck with that

2007-03-23 14:17:25 · update #5

Where is the evidence for the gas chambers?

2007-03-23 14:24:09 · update #6

Ooh, that scares me, I'm trembling in my boots, lol

2007-03-23 14:28:21 · update #7

LittleLizzy, I have been there and it did hurt my heart...but I've matured a bit and have begun to think for myself more

2007-03-23 14:32:43 · update #8

dude, I'm still waiting for that report you promised me, can you hurry up with it?

2007-03-24 11:26:38 · update #9

7 answers

Do a little research here, it's not hard to find out. Believe it or not, some people's ashes were sent back to their families. But the majority of the remains were buried in mass graves. If you're ever in DC, take a trip to the Holocaust Memorial Museum, it's worth the trip, and it's free admission. You'll be amazed at what you learn and if the things you'll see don't absolutely hurt your heart.....you just don't have one!

2007-03-23 14:30:10 · answer #1 · answered by LittleLizzy 1 · 4 0

The nazis started out working or starving the jews to death. Then they moved on to digging large trenchs for firing squads. It became a problem for them to dispose of so many bodies. Thats when they came up with the large creamation furnaces, some of which still stand today. Burning to ashes produces very little left over to dispose of. Is this what you want to know? Or are you questioning the holocaust like the Iranian madman president. The death camps and corpses were well documented and photographed. And some camps have been preserved as reminders of the horror. You can come to germany and poland and see the camps and furnaces that still remain.

2007-03-23 14:18:22 · answer #2 · answered by morris 5 · 3 1

The fukkin ashes?....they got buried u moron

and more than 6 million died in the holocaust, Jews weren't the only people the Nazis didn't like....You keep making statements trying to deny the holocaust on here and this is your reasoning behind your theory of no holocaust?.....what about the stockpiles of glasses, gold teeth, watches, shoes, and mutha ******* hair

I don't care if u got a problem with me or people like me, or even ppl up in Israel....but ppl making fun of THIS makes me wanna spit in your face right before I bounce their little screw ball head off the pavement

UPDATE----

No, woman...I'm not so mad at you for this question, I said "ppl" (shortened for people...ya dig?)....but since you made that snide remark that you got more, I'll counter with the proposal of - do it and get reported....It's my little way giving you the finger through the internet

-peeeeeeeeeeeeace

2007-03-23 14:14:11 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

Actually it was 11 million people 6 million were jew's.And they used the ashes for fertilizer in their garden's.

2007-03-23 14:10:32 · answer #4 · answered by flossie mae 5 · 1 0

Ever heard of mass graves?
Ashes and bone fragments were buried.

2007-03-23 14:08:59 · answer #5 · answered by ed 7 · 3 0

I'm with DUDE on this one.

2007-03-23 14:25:41 · answer #6 · answered by biged 3 · 2 1

you racist piglet!

2007-03-23 14:07:32 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 2 2

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