Poland (pre-war frontiers). About 90% of the Jewish population (about 3 million out of a prewar Jewish population of about 3.3 million). Also Lithuania, with a similar or slightly higher percentage of the Jewish population (about 196,000 out of 208,000).
In addition, Jews from all over Nazi occupied Europe were transported to the extermination camps in Poland to be killed there.
not a simple question, but because so many countries sent their Jews to be killed in Poland, the answer is:
Poland
1. On the eve of World War 2 in Europe, Poland had by far the largest Jewish population - about 3.3 million. An estimated 2.9 million of them were killed in the Holocaust.
2. All the major extermination camps were in occupied Poland.
The largest number by far were from Poland which lost 90 percent of its
Jewish population or about three million. Germany and Austria lost 88
percent or about 210,00, the Baltic countries contributed 90 percent or
about 228,000. Hungary, Greece, France, The Netherlands, Slovakia.
Belgium, the Ukraine, Russia, Yugoslavia, Romania and Bulgaria all fed
Jewish people into the Holocaust. The Jewish population of Norway was
cut in half and even a few Jewish soldiers in the US Army were singled
out and suffered as a result of their faith. Of the occupied countries in
WW-2 only Denmark as a nation actively protected their citizens of the
Jewish faith.
Poland, which lost about 2.9-3 million Jews (out of a prewar Jewish population of about 3.3 million).
concentration camps were located in Germany and Poland(which was taken over by Germany). Poland however ws the home to the death camps
Gas Chamber and Germany
The actual number of deaths is not known. There were an estimated 6 million European Jews. There were most likely about the same number of non-Jewish deaths, these fell into many groups Russian POW's, Polish, disable, freemasons, gays, and even Jehovah's Witnesses.
If you mean by the number of an countries population of certain groups of people who were killed in the Holocaust then the USSR in which 1,598,000 out would of been 3.28 Million people who survived the Holocaust. Most of these were Jews.
Possibly by using improvised, home-made weapons, but very few Nazi soldiers were killed by Jews. Raul Hilberg estimates a total of at most 300 Nazis killed by Jews.
Jews (about six million killed)Soviet prisoners of war (about 3.3 million killed)GypsiesNon-Jewish Polish civilians
Most of the Jews in the areas under Nazi control were not saved at all - by anyone - but were killed in the Holocaust. Those Jews that survived did so thanks to the Allied victory over Nazi Germany. There's no single country that can claim to 'have saved the Jews'. However, Denmark can claim to have saved most of its own, Danish Jewish population by shipping them to Sweden before most of them were rounded up for deportation.
Poland
Poland with nearly 3.7 million killed Jews.
The Jews that were killed in the Holocaust were killed in a variety of ways. Many were shot, most were killed with poison gas.
the countries of the Pale of Settlement had the most Jews and also lost the most.
No, most were jews, but there were, homosexuals and gypysies. Maybe a few germans aswell.
About 6 million Jews were killed at the hands of the Nazis. The majority of these were not German Jews and most of the killings took place in Nazi-occupied Poland.
The mass killings took place between 1941 and 1945.
Most were killed by poison gas, the next most common method was shooting.
The Holocaust during World War II is considered one of the deadliest genocides in history, with approximately six million Jews killed.
Poland 3,000,000 & 90% all jews were there
Troops were not killed in the Holocaust, but Jews 6 million died. ____ The Holocaust was genocide, not a war.
The usual estimate of the number of Austrian Jews killed in the Holocaust is about 65,000. (Obviously, most of them were murdered outside Austria).