Ghetto Prisoners 100%

: In some locations, such as Theresienstadt, a "polis" mentality emerged among functionaries who viewed the ghetto as a reformed society, albeit with limited autonomy from the SS.

: Children were among the most affected, with approximately 15,000 incarcerated in Theresienstadt alone. Prisoners made desperate attempts to create nurseries to improve their chances of survival. 3. Resistance and Underground Movements Prisoner resistance took both passive and active forms: Deceiving the Public | Holocaust Encyclopedia Ghetto Prisoners

: Authorities often withheld food and water supplies, leading to rampant starvation and outbreaks of infectious diseases like typhus. : In some locations, such as Theresienstadt, a

Ghettos were designed as temporary, closed quarters to isolate, control, and segregate Jewish populations. Conditions were characterized by extreme deprivation: in the Kovno ghetto

: Space was severely limited; in the Kovno ghetto, prisoners were allocated less than ten square feet of living space each. In Antopol, as many as 50–60 people lived in a single house.

: Intellectuals and artists engaged in "spiritual resistance." In the Vilna ghetto, the "Paper Brigade" risked their lives to smuggle and hide precious Jewish manuscripts and books from Nazi destruction.