The number of people which survived WW2 has still to this day not been accurately recorded. What I can tell you is approx. how many people died, which was about 60 to 80 million people that's about 2.5-3 % of the world population.
Very few Holocaust survivors from the extermination concentration camps are still alive. Most of the survivors were males. And as no children below the age of 12 survived the camps, all survivors must have been born earlier than 1932. This would make the very youngest of them, 84 years old, as of 2015.
350000___Where does that very high figure come from?If you look at the answer for the question, `How many Holocaust survivors?` you will see where the figure came from.You also need to date the estimate, as there are fewer Holocausts survivors every year. In 2012, there are probably only 260,000 Holocaust survivors left.
Treblinka II was an extermination camp and only about 40 people survived - that is, were still alive at the end of World War 2 in Europe. None of them is particularly famous.
The number of Jewish survivors from concentration camps, labour camps and the like still alive at the end of World War 2 in Europe is estimated at 200,000. (Please see the related question). However, if you are asking how many Jews in areas that were under Nazi rule at one time or other during World War 2 survived, the figure would be much higher - probably around 1.5 million.
Zero. There are no more World War One vets alive anymore. Florence Green of England was the last veteran of WW1 and past away on February 4th 2012.
There are no remaining survivors of WWI
667
i think me and a few thousand ww2 vets. still live. byron
3 Ans2: That may be close to the number of WW1 survivors (they would have to be well into their 90's), but there must be millions of WW2 survivors, who only need to have passed their 65th birthday.
1000 less than yesterday
ALL survived. but the question is where they went.
"Survivors" are all the people who did not die. No records are kept of survivors of war. Records are kept of those who died.
Very few Holocaust survivors from the extermination concentration camps are still alive. Most of the survivors were males. And as no children below the age of 12 survived the camps, all survivors must have been born earlier than 1932. This would make the very youngest of them, 84 years old, as of 2015.
anywhere in the world
No
7463
The survivors of World War 1 would be in their late 100s or over 100 years old. Given that the war ended in 1918, most of the survivors would have been born before 1918 or during the early years of the war.