Social Sciences, asked by damrudharakabasi89, 4 months ago

How were the Jews children treated by the Nazis?​

Answers

Answered by shivi835
1

Answer:

Children were especially vulnerable to Nazi persecution. Some were targeted on supposed racial grounds, such as Jewish youngsters. Others were targeted for biological reasons, such as patients with physical or mental disabilities, or because of their alleged resistance or political activities. As many as 1.5 million Jewish children alone were murdered or died at the hands of Nazi officials or their collaborators.

Explanation:-

•The Nazis did not single out children specifically because they were children, but because of their alleged membership in dangerous racial, biological, or political groups.

•Along with elderly people, children had the lowest rate of survival in concentration camps and killing centers. People over fifty years of age, pregnant women, and young children were immediately sent to the gas chambers at Auschwitz-Birkenau and other killing centers.

•Thousands of Jewish children survived, however, many because they were hidden. With identities disguised, and often physically concealed from the outside world, these youngsters faced constant fear, dilemmas, and danger.

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Answered by s1891padmanavo6158
2

Answer:

The condition of Jews children in Nazi rule was pitiful. Jews children were forced to be recruited in the army. From the childhood the boys were made rough and tough while the girls were were taught home duties.

Explanation:

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