to check in with the guards to see whether one was allowed access to the camp.
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Death camps were the Nazi's way to eliminate those who did not fit their mold. In all, there were seven death camps located in Europe.
There were thousands of camps all over Germany a long time before they started building the true death camps. If you tap in concentration camps into any web search engine, it will show you a map of the camps. They were not all death camps, but were camps for Germans who were not Nazi's, and were used for, what they called 're-training'. IF you were released, and still able to think or even walk, you made sure you followed the rules and joined the 'Nazi Party' and kept your thoughts, to yourself in future.
There were four sub-camps of Auschwitz in Gleiwitz.
In Nazi concentration camps a pipel was a boy (usually in early adolescence) kept by an SS guard or a kapo for sex. This was tolerated at some camps.
There were three camps at Glewitz (including one women's camp). They were all sub-camps of Auschwitz.