Impact on liberation In the early 1945 's in the early 1945' s, the collapse of the Nazi concentration camp system resulted in severe overcrowding, which brought about the death of many prisoners. As the Allies moved beyond Europe, they met thousands of prisoners from concentration camps. They noticed that many of these prisoners suffered from starvation, fatigue and illness. Many of the soldiers who encountered these camps were sick. They encountered not only sick prisoners but also corpse mountains, rooms filled with clothes, bags for people, tools and gas chambers with nail marks on the walls.
In January 1941, Mauthausen and Goossen became the only three-level camp in the Nazi concentration camp system. Most other camps, such as Polish Dachau, Sachsenhausen, Auschwitz concentration camps, are designated as first-class camps and political prisoners want to be released after at least six months of "rehabilitation" . The slogan of Dachau, Sachsenhausen, Auschwitz's main gate is written as "Arbeit Macht Frei", suggesting that political prisoners may be able to work hard at will. Buchenwald is a secondary camp where political prisoners feel difficult to recover, where the house number says "Jedem das Seine" or English: Everyone gets what he deserves
The Auschwitz concentration camp was a network of concentration camps and extinction camps founded and operated by Nazi Germany in Poland occupied during the Second World War. This includes Auschwitz I (the original concentration camp), Auschwitz II - Birkenau (central colony / extinction camp), Auschwitz III - Monowitz (labor camp using IG Farben's factory), and 45 Of satellite camps. Auschwitz I originally came for Polish prisoners in Poland and arrived in May 1940. The extinction of the first prisoners in September 1941. Auschwitz II - Birkenau continued the Nazi as the main place to eventually solve the Jewish problem. Problems during the massacre. From the beginning of 1942 until the end of 1944, transportation trains carried the Jews from various parts of Europe to the gas chambers of the camp, where they were killed together with the cyanide-based poison Zyklon B developed as an insecticide.
Many people call all the Nazi imprisonment places during the Holocaust as concentration camps. The term "concentration camp" is used to describe the place of imprisonment and murder under the Nazi regime, but not every place established by Nazi is a concentration camp. Places founded by the Nazis include: Forced labor camps and temporary camps: Forced labor camps are shameless and humiliating imposed on prisoners without proper equipment, clothing, nutrition, or rest It was used for labor. Transit camp serves as a temporary management facility for Jews waiting for expulsion outside the country. These camps are usually the last stop before expulsion to the killing center. 1830 Forced Labor Camp