Polish prisoners in Nazi concentration camps
During World War II, hundreds of thousands of non-Jewish Polish citizens were imprisoned in Nazi concentration camps for various reasons, including Polish resistance movement in World War II.[1][better source needed]
In Auschwitz alone, there were between 130,000 and 150,000 Polish prisoners, about half of them who perished during their incarceration.[2]
References
Further reading
- Wachsmann, Nikolaus (2015). KL: A History of the Nazi Concentration Camps. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 978-0-374-11825-9.
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Nazi concentration camps
- Arbeitsdorf
- Auschwitz
- Bergen-Belsen
- Buchenwald
- Dachau
- Flossenbürg
- Gross-Rosen
- Herzogenbusch
- Hinzert
- subcamps
- Kaiserwald
- subcamps
- Kauen
- Kraków-Płaszów
- Majdanek
- Mauthausen and Gusen
- Mittelbau-Dora
- Natzweiler-Struthof
- Neuengamme
- Niederhagen
- Ravensbrück
- Sachsenhausen
- Stutthof
- Vaivara
- subcamps
- Warsaw
- Action 14f13
- Action 14f14
- Early camps
- Forced labor
- Identification of inmates and Badges
- Language
- Disciplinary and Penal Code
- Death marches
- Postenpflicht
- Selection
- Slogans
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