When Britain found out what was happening to the children, they set up a way to help called kindertransport. Kindertransport was what some parents sent their children on that were under seventeen away on trains to keep them safe, knowing that they would probably never see them again. They did this …show more content…
If you were older than twelve you would be considered old enough to work. Your head would be shaved before you got in, and you would get a permanent number on your arm, that was how they identified you, them you would be given a different pair of clothes and be sent into the camp. Some jewish children were treated worse than the kids of other religions. That was because the Nazis thought they were not even considered human. The kind of work they did was not easy. They were beaten if they made one small mistake! The kids would work in factories, making things like jets or bombs, sometimes they had to make the Nazis uniforms, or do their laundry. Some kids would work extra by carrying out dead bodies, then they would get an extra bowl of soup to eat. After they were done working for the day, the children cleaned up by rubbing bleach on themselves and washing it off with water. Then they went to there barracks. The barracks were one big room that many kids shared and slept in. Each day they would wake up early to be counted and do the same