37. How did they die?
Some died from typhus. Numerically speaking, most Jews died from
gassing, the next-most from shooting.
In the camps inside the "Altreich" (see
question 1),
death was mainly due to starvation and disease. When inmates are given
insufficient food and forced to work hard labor, there is often little
practical distinction between the two. At
Auschwitz,
which was both an extermination and a work camp, prisoners were
"selected" every so often, with the weakest being gassed.
That way, fewer had the opportunity to die of exhaustion, and they met
their end in the gas chambers instead.
When the Allies reached the Nazi death camps in Germany, they found
the SS personnel well-fed and well-dressed, and the local population was
often not undergoing serious hardship, relatively speaking. (On the
other hand, the German population in the big cities did suffer a lot.)
This is clearly attested to in the film footage of the liberation of the
camps, where one can see the people in the nearby towns and villages,
which the American soldiers brought over to the camps so they can
witness what happened. None of them are starved.
There is also a famous
photograph
of some plump SS women being captured at
Bergen-Belsen.
Tens of thousands of prisoners starved at Belsen. If you've seen a film
of emaciated corpses being bulldozed into mass graves, it was probably
taken at Belsen. The contrast to the well-fed SS women is quite
remarkable. Scenes from the liberation
of Bergen-Belsen demonstrate this beyond question.
Also, hardly any of the Allied prisoners from Western nations
starved to death; there
were people that the Nazis wanted to keep alive, and there were people
they preferred dead. A great number of Soviet POW's died -- over three
million -- for this reason.