Respuesta :
The prisoners in Nazi concentration camps had to move a lot from camp to camp, as Allied soldiers were coming to liberate them. In order to not get caught, everyone in the camp had to leave and go to another one. If this is not correct, let me know please.
Answer: Prisoners Experienced the Extreme
Explanation:
Much of WWII was falling apart, this affected the remaining concentration camps. People most likely saw and suffered horrible conditions. The camps' conditions were at the worst they had ever been. Bodies were piled up everywhere, the disease was rampant, an ugly stench permeated most of the camps, people dropped to the ground faster than any other year that the concentration camps were active. It was a brutal choice between life or death. This all happened before but much of the things listed above along with others happened at a staggering rate. At the very end, others experienced liberation from 1944-1945. Some were too weak to make it out alive. They experienced the worst of the worst in the camps' at the very end of the war. Some camps even continued functioning after the war. This didn't last very long, however. Much of the camps' conditions can be compared to that of trench warfare.