Many wanted to but it was impossible.
1) Because of poverty
2) Because of restrictive emigration laws from the countries of Europe
3) Because Palestine was ruled by the British who had by that time imposed strict limits on Immigration
4) Many other countries, including America, had also enacted strict immigration limits
Poland had the largest Jewish population in Europe before World War II, with approximately 3.3 million Jews residing there.
On the eve of World War 2 there were an estimated 9.4-9.5 million Jews in Europe and after the war about 3.4 million.
There were about 9.4 million Jews in Europe just before the start of World War 2 and a further 7 million or so elsewhere.
Jesus was a Jew who was born before the Jews were exiled to Europe - Eastern Europe "creating" Ashkenazi Jews and Wester Europe (Spain) "creating" Sefardi Jews.
Should be free of Jews and that Asia and Europe should merge into a super continent and that everyone should be Nazis
Before World War II, Jews had varying social statuses they were neither condemned not exalted by their religion and ethnicity. Throughout Europe Jews were farmers, shop owners and scholars. Some were wealthy and some were poor.
People.See also:Why were many Jews so passive in WW2?Why didn't the Jews leave Europe before WW2?Why do you think many people didn't notice the harassment of German Jews before World War Two?
Almost all Jews were deported from cental Europe in world war 2, to the east.
Obviously, if all Jews have been able to get out of the 'danger zone' before World War 2, many millions of lives would have been saved. This presupposes that the Holocaust was predictable, which was not the case. It also presupposed that there were countries willing to take them in ...
The Nazi Holocaust eliminated 6 million European Jews and Israel absorbed Jews from post-war Europe and the Arab World.
There were less Jews.
Because Hitler blaimed the Jews for the tradety of World War I