In 1516, when the Venetian government designated a specific residential area for the Jews, the term "Jewish colony" was originally used for Jews. During the Second World War they were founded by the Nazis to isolate and rule the Jews as the first step towards ultimate extinction ("ghetto"). Through the war, the Nazis set up more than 400 Jewish settlements in Eastern Europe and Russia for this purpose. The Nazism slum supervisor appointed the Jewish Committee of Jews to maintain and distribute the order of the slum and to help Nazis be deported to concentration camps and death camps.
By the end of the nineteenth century, these slums were gradually dismantled. However, under the rule of Nazi Germany, slums are no longer disappearing from history, but there was a more disadvantageous purpose than isolation. The German army has built a slum town in more than a thousand cities in Europe. They are isolated, tightly controlled and deprived of resources - but unlike the historic slums they are not intended to be sustainable. Restoring the Jewish quarter made the genocide a simpler project. As the Holocaust progressed, the slums were carried by trains. Prisoners in the huge Warsaw Jewish district had 400,000 Jews who were desperately expelled to death camps. Their number is above the number and the demand is above the supply, but some people try to die according to their own situation; thousands of Jews kill on the slums walls rather than refugee camps It will be.
A year after the invasion, the Nazis set up a Jewish community among the Jewish Jews, whose ultimate goal was the massacre of the Jews. 350 thousand Jews, which account for nearly 30% of the city's total population, are housed in a 3-square-mile slum area. There is a brick wall of ten feet high barbed wire around the slum area. Life in the slums is tragic. The Nazis is about 200 calories per person per day. Death from starvation is common. Dust on the streets and the human body were scattered, hygiene was very bad. There is a lack of means to warm soap, clothing, living space. Many people are frozen to death. Tuberculosis, dysentery, spot fever, typhoid fever and other diseases are everywhere and Irena's father's life is deprived.
The Jews among the Jews were in a bad situation. Nazi confiscated all his belongings and robbed most of his daily needs. Severe overcrowding, lack of hygiene, extreme hunger and refusal of essential drugs caused many slums prevalence. The poor situation and long-term forced labor further weakened the Jews. In the largest Jewish district of Warsaw, about 85,000 Jews (about 20% of the population of the slums) died before the Nazis forced them to concentration camps. Other slums have similar mortality rates, and even if they get a little better, according to Dr. Lazar Epstein, the diary of the Werner slums, they are "narrow" like tombs It is.