Answer:
nonviolent defiance - Jews continued to observe their holidays and traditions in secret.
Treblinka - Prisoners attacked guards with stolen weapons and set fire to a camp.
Sobibor - Prisoners killed eighteen SS guards and officers at a concentration camp.
Auschwitz Protocols - Escapees wrote eyewitness accounts of atrocities in concentration camps.
partisan groups - People lived together in forests to avoid capture by the Nazis.
Step-by-step explanation:
The Jewish resistance comprised of both violent and nonviolent defiance measures. While many Jews took violent measures in Treblinka and Sobibor, some chose to toke non-violent measures. Observing Jew holidays and traditions in secret was one among many measures undertaken by nonviolent Jews.
Treblinka was one the first places where resistance against the Nazis took place. Inmates attacked prison guards in Treblinka and stolen weapons and set the camp on fire in 1943.
Again in 1943 itself, prisoners killed eighteen SS guards and officers at Sobibor concentration camp.
The Auschwitz Protocols is a collection of reports and eyewitness accounts written by escapees about the atrocities committed against them in the concentration camps.
The partisan groups, also known as Bielski partisans , were a group of Jewish partisans who lived together in forests to avoid capture by the Nazis. They gave refuge to many Jew women and children during the Nazi occupation.