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In the
summer of 1938, 2,200 "asocial" (meaning
"criminal") Jews were arrested and imprisoned in three
concentration camps: Dachau, Buchenwald, and Sachsenhausen. Many of
these people had committed petty administrative offenses such as
illegal parking, late payments, and the like. Unemployed Jews were
arrested for having evaded the requirement to work. As a condition
for their release, they had to promise to leave Germany. |