The ghettos in Nazi-occupied Europe--primarily Poland--were often closed off by walls, barbed-wire fences, or gates. Ghettos were extremely crowded and unsanitary. Starvation, chronic food and fuel shortages, and severe winter weather led to repeated outbreaks of epidemics and to a high mortality rate. Ghettoization, however, was seen as a temporary situation, and in many places the ghettos existed only for a brief time. With the implementation of the "Final Solution" in 1942, the Germans began to destroy the ghettos through deportation of the Jewish occupants to forced-labor and extermination camps.
Conditions for the german soldiers were the same as what the jews had to faced. But however had some prevention from diseases and nasty plagues by wearing protective gear such as masks and disease fighting technology. They did not live to older age as they suffered greatly from the terror of the holocaust, depression and anxiety issues. Many of the german soldiers also faced death from the soviet union when they appeared in surprise to free the jews and save their lives.
Conditions for the german soldiers were the same as what the jews had to faced. But however had some prevention from diseases and nasty plagues by wearing protective gear such as masks and disease fighting technology. They did not live to older age as they suffered greatly from the terror of the holocaust, depression and anxiety issues. Many of the german soldiers also faced death from the soviet union when they appeared in surprise to free the jews and save their lives.