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2007-05-28 05:20:12 · 5 answers · asked by paul n 1 in Arts & Humanities History

5 answers

birkenau was part of auschwitz. it's where they kept the gas chambers and it was established as an extermination camp by himmler.

2007-05-28 05:27:50 · answer #1 · answered by harie 3 · 2 0

on the beginning up of the warfare, the Nazis had the thought that they could around up each and every of the Jews (and commerce Unionist, Communists, Homosexuals, Jehovah Witnesses, Gypsies, Nudists .. and a few different communities) and at last deliver them off someplace. (Madagascar grow to be heavily seen quicker or later). Early concentration Camps - like Theresienstadt, Ravensbruck, and Belsen-Buchenwald - have been initially designed specifically as keeping camps. there grow to be little scientific care, and intensely adverse sanitation or plumbing - so ailment and dying stages have been intense. yet those early camps weren't quite designed for killing. In those early years of the warfare, communities that the Nazis actively meant to exterminate (the mentally ill, and people who have been seen 'criminally insane') have been gassed in dying wagons. In January 1942 the Nazis realised that they've been in no way going to have the flexibility to deport each and every of the human beings interior the concentration camps; so on the Wannsee convention (at a nicely-liked trip hotel in basic terms exterior Berlin) Rheinhard Heydrich got here up with a plan for the in basic terms precise answer. the in basic terms precise answer could contain murdering somewhat some the human beings at the instant interior the concentration camps. New expert camps have been built with the kit mandatory for mass extermination (gaschambers and huge crematoria) at places like Treblinka and Sobibor. the dissimilar existent concentration camps have been additionally adapted for huge scale homicide (Belsen Buchenwald and Auschwitz), yet countless of the older concentration camps have been left as non-deathcamps (Ravensbruck and Theresienstadt are 2 examples). So the particularly deathcamps initiate only after the 1942 Wannsee convention. I used to have a pal who spent countless years on the Ravensbruck concentration camp. 'only' a pair of quarter of the human beings she knew there died (in a dying camp it could have been closer 3 quarters, or maybe larger). She theory she have been plenty luckier than something of her kin, none of whom survived the warfare.

2016-12-30 04:02:22 · answer #2 · answered by wurster 3 · 0 0

No they were two different concentration camps in Poland. Did you know that there were a total of 11 just in Poland?

2007-05-28 05:24:18 · answer #3 · answered by Darla 5 · 0 1

the same complex

2007-05-28 05:38:34 · answer #4 · answered by Its not me Its u 7 · 1 0

no

2007-05-28 05:23:24 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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