They didn't really made a living. They did anything to survive. The ghettos that survived a long time were the productive ghettos.
The Holocaust was not a living thing, it was a period of time in which the Nazis attempted to exterminate many "races" especially Jews.
At that time, Jews in Germany and in countries under German occupation were banned from most occupations. They were not allowed to make a living.
What are you asking? Your question is somewhat absurd. They were simply living their life wherever they happen to be living.
they had to move the people who were already living there out of their homes.
To make a homeland for the Jews after the Holocaust. == ==
No, there were survivors, too. There were also Jews living in countries like the US that were beyond the reach of the Nazis.
Oskar Schindler was an industrialist for a living. During the Holocaust he was responsible for saving 1,200 Jews from execution.
The Jews targeted in the Holocaust were civilians.
there would not have been the Holocaust without the Jews.
Approximately six million of the estimated nine million Holocaust victims were Jewish.
A litlle less than the 8.000 living there.
More than 6 million Jews and a like number of non-Jews were killed. Millions more emerged with major injuries and horrific memories. Today there are more living "Schindler Jews" around the world, than Jews in Poland. In 1939, there were 3 million Jews in Poland.