Quizzes & Puzzles6 mins ago
In hiding during WWII like Anne Frank
I've been watching the most recent adaptation of Anne Frank's Diary and visited the house itself last year which just makes it all so horribly more real.
Does anyone know is people in hiding, like the Franks and the others, had any idea what would happen to them if they were caught or whether it was an unknown.
Whatever the reality it must have been horrific but I did wonder how much they really knew, I noticed they had a radio.
Does anyone know is people in hiding, like the Franks and the others, had any idea what would happen to them if they were caught or whether it was an unknown.
Whatever the reality it must have been horrific but I did wonder how much they really knew, I noticed they had a radio.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I don't think very few (if any) Jews,Gays,Disabled or Gypsies new what was awaiting them in the Concentration Camps.
Some had heard of these camps,but even those that did thought they were (as they were told) just "work Camps" where they would be "safe" from the agressive nature of the Non Jews/Gays/Disabled/Gypsies.
Indeed many Germans (at the start) thought that too.It was to begin with only the people that lived near the camps that new the awful things that went on there.It only started to filter out into the general population as the war progressed,but people looked away and thought "The Fuhrer must know what he is doing,and there must be a reason for it"
When the war ended and the scale of the slaughter was revealed some (brave) Germans admitted to it,but many denied what had happened or just ignored it altogether.
There are STILL older Germans who say the Holcaust was an American (Jewish) invention,hence the law in Germany making denial of the Holcaust illegal.
My Wife's Mother was Jewish,and she and my wife survived the camps,but most of her family did not.
She was completely unaware of just what lay instore for her in them.
My wife and I married (in Germany) in 1948,and I brought her back to the UK.She did experience some prejudice,but after the camps it was a holiday to her!
Some had heard of these camps,but even those that did thought they were (as they were told) just "work Camps" where they would be "safe" from the agressive nature of the Non Jews/Gays/Disabled/Gypsies.
Indeed many Germans (at the start) thought that too.It was to begin with only the people that lived near the camps that new the awful things that went on there.It only started to filter out into the general population as the war progressed,but people looked away and thought "The Fuhrer must know what he is doing,and there must be a reason for it"
When the war ended and the scale of the slaughter was revealed some (brave) Germans admitted to it,but many denied what had happened or just ignored it altogether.
There are STILL older Germans who say the Holcaust was an American (Jewish) invention,hence the law in Germany making denial of the Holcaust illegal.
My Wife's Mother was Jewish,and she and my wife survived the camps,but most of her family did not.
She was completely unaware of just what lay instore for her in them.
My wife and I married (in Germany) in 1948,and I brought her back to the UK.She did experience some prejudice,but after the camps it was a holiday to her!
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