Was there some sort of program in place for the Allied countries to take in freed prisoners and set them up in their countries? Somebody in the camp must have had no personal possessions to set themselves up somewhere?
There's always more to add, but you may want to read this previous thread with answers from u/BigBennP and u/The_Alaskan: I'm a Jewish man in 1946 recently liberated from a death camp. My home has been destroyed by the war, all my friends and family have been eradicated, I have no money or possessions and all records of me have been destroyed. What do I do and who can I turn to for help?
I have previously found answers by /u/commiespaceinvader and /u/Kugelfang52 and /u/unveiledignorance for How did the different Allied armies treat people liberated from concentration camps?
See also this answer about how the field of Holocaust studies developed and episode 57 of the AskHistorians Podcast, which talks about competing interpretations of the Holocaust in history. The link goes to a transcript but includes a link to the podcast thread as well.