I was a little surprised by the degree of association. Practices may have varied from camp to camp. But certainly men and women were much more segregated in Auschwitz. Think of the graphic novel Maus, where Vladek Spiegelman has to take extraordinary measures just to send a message to his wife, held elsewhere in the huge complex.
I also was surprised that Red Army POWs like Sasha were not segregated from the other prisoners, even though they were Jews and perhaps for that reason were lumped in with them. They could and did impart military knowledge to other prisoners. When they first arrive the Germans notice their military bearing and their unbowed attitude, but it doesn't cause them to take precautions.
My impression is that Sobibor was rather badly run by the Germans compared to other camps, and this partly explains the successful break-out.
"Chicken soup - with a *beep* straw."
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