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Yes. Not as large of a one as there was pre-Holocaust, but there is a still actually a significant population. (I'm Jewish, and I was born there, in fact).
details of "crstal night" in Hamburg
Everyone. It was created by the Nazis in 1940. All Jews in Warsaw were ordered into the ghetto, and all non-Jews were ordered out. (Note that it was not the existing, prewar Jewish district, but an area close to a large railhead, for onward deportation).
Yes, just before the start of World War 2 Poland had the largest Jewish community in Europe - about 3.3 million Jews, who made up about 10% of the population of Poland.
It was during the British occupation of Mandatory Palestine that the Zionist dream of creating a Jewish State in the Middle East was finally realized in large portion. The influx of a large foreign Jewish population made a Jewish State viable and therefore allowed for the beginnings of the Arab-Israeli Conflict. Additionally, the British failed to adequately maintain the peace between the different communities, allowing the small internecine conflicts and pogroms to become more sporadic militia fights and eventually boiling to proper war.
About 7, 230
In 1925 the Jewish population of Berlin was about 150,000.
Yes. Not as large of a one as there was pre-Holocaust, but there is a still actually a significant population. (I'm Jewish, and I was born there, in fact).
details of "crstal night" in Hamburg
Typical, large population of warriors suppressing smaller population of agriculturalists.
Typical, large population of warriors suppressing smaller population of agriculturalists.
There's a decent sized Jewish population in New Zealand. However, that'll probably change if the ban on kosher meat and chicken isn't lifted.
About 450,000 (out of a total population of 47 million).
The largest city in Switzerland by population is Zürich, then comes Geneva (French: Genève), Basel, Bern (the capital) and Lausanne.
Yes. There is a large Jewish population in the city so there would be kosher markets.
If the question is asking "Which Spanish-speaking country has the largest Jewish population today?", the answer is Argentina with roughly 200,000 Jews. If the question is asking, "Which Spanish-speaking country historically had the largest percentage of Jews?", the answer would be Spain since Spain had a large Jewish population in 1490.
Of the cities occupied by the Nazis, the one with the largest Jewish population in 1939 was probably Warsaw, which had a total population of 1.3 million, of which about 400,000 was Jewish. Vilnius, Minsk and Lviv (also known as as Lvov and as Lemberg) had very large Jewish populations, also Lodz.