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  1. Over 40,000 camps existed across the continent during the six years of war, incarcerating millions of people. Concentration and prisoner of war camps in western Germany in places like Buchenwald, Dachau, and Bergen-Belsen have become strongly associated with mass murders of the Holocaust, yet this was not their primary function throughout the war.

  2. 5 days ago · Extermination camp, Nazi German concentration camp specializing in the mass annihilation of unwanted persons in the Third Reich and conquered territories. The victims were mostly Jews but also included Roma, Slavs, homosexuals, alleged mental defectives, and others. These camps were central to the Holocaust.

  3. Between 5,000 to 15,000 homosexuals died in concentration camps during the Holocaust. No Place for the Disabled. The Nazis decided that it was a waste of time and money to support the disabled. During Hitler’s “cleansing program,“ thousands of people with various handicaps were deemed useless and put to death like dogs and cats.

  4. 5 days ago · Auschwitz, Nazi Germany’s largest concentration camp and extermination camp. Located near the town of Oswiecim in southern Poland, Auschwitz was actually three camps in one: a prison camp, an extermination camp, and a slave-labor camp. Between 1.1 and 1.5 million people died there; 90 percent of them were Jews.

  5. Sep 26, 2023 · Between 800,000 and 1,000,000 Jews were murdered in ghettos, labor camps, and concentration camps. In ghettos, concentration camps, and labor camps created by the Germans and their allies and collaborators, Jews were murdered through deliberate privation, disease, brutal treatment, and arbitrary acts of violence. At least 250,000 Jews were ...

  6. Jew. One of history’s darkest chapters, the Holocaust was the systematic killing of six million Jewish men, women, and children and millions of others by Nazi Germany and its collaborators during World War II (1939–45). Slavs, Roma, gay people, Jehovah’s Witnesses, and others also were singled out for obliteration, but the Nazis ...

  7. As the Soviet Red Army approached Auschwitz in January 1945, toward the end of the war, the SS sent most of the camp's population west on a death march to camps inside Germany and Austria. Soviet troops entered the camp on 27 January 1945, a day commemorated since 2005 as International Holocaust Remembrance Day.

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