Very few Jews were killed by the Nazis before World War 2. The Holocaust started with mobile killing units in the Soviet Union in July 1941, and the first regular mass gassings started at Chelmno in December 1941 and rapidly accelerated in 1942.
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Approximately six million
16 to 17 million.
* There about 15 million Jews (adherents of Judaism) in the world. * By no means all of them are Holocaust survivors or descended from Holocaust survivors.
No. The Jewish population of the world is only about 14 million.
The Jewish people in Germany still mourn the loss of their friends and family, even now. World War II was devastating for the Jewish people in Germany.
It's not true. Jewish people are respected in many countries in the world.
A plan to exterminate all the Jewish people in Europe and later, the world.
The Jewish people now have the nation of Israel .
No, there are plenty of the Jewish faith still alive in the world.
over sixmillion Jews died in the holocaust
* There about 15 million Jews (adherents of Judaism) in the world. * By no means all of them are Holocaust survivors or descended from Holocaust survivors.
Some famous Jewish people who lived throughout the Second World War include Albert Einstein and Leonard Bernstein. People who were born just before the war include Woody Allen and Elizabeth Taylor.
Hitler first was in world war 1 that is how he started to dislike Jewish people
No. The Jewish population of the world is only about 14 million.
The Jewish people in Germany still mourn the loss of their friends and family, even now. World War II was devastating for the Jewish people in Germany.
There are approximately 14-15 million people worldwide who identify as Jewish.
It's not true. Jewish people are respected in many countries in the world.
In Jewish legend prophecy withdrew from the world when the Temple, God's link to His people, was destroyed. The prophets alive at the time remained, but the easy communion with God died out with them.
The Jews were shattered. Authors alive at the time describe the Jewish communities as being thoroughly shocked by the magnitude of the Holocaust, and in a daze, from which they did not recover quickly.