the two main destinations were Palestine and America.
How many Jews survived at the end of world war 2
99% of the non combatant jews coming to sweden survived the war.
yes, but not all of themAnswer:About two-thirds of European Jews were killed by the Nazis.
most of the Jews within Romania's pre-war borders survived, but this was arguably at the expense of the Jews within the territories that Romania gained during the war.
Poland - of the 3,000,000 Jews in pre-war Poland only 200,000 or so have survived.
Those who were in the areas of conflict survived through luck.
About 22 where killed in Norway. But 768 norwegian jews where sent to death camps in Germany/Poland, few survived. Some 1100 jew survived the war, of them 925 jews who managed to flee to Sweden.
the longer that one would avoid incarceration, the more likely that they would survive
If one takes Poland's pre-war borders, there were about 3.3 million Jews. About 10% of these survived - in other words just over 300,000. In addition, about 3 million Gentile Poles were also killed.
The War I Survived was created in 1988.
There is not an exact number of people who survived. And you did not specify which category of people. Jews - There were about 600 million Jewish people captured by the Germans during World War II, and less than 6,000 survived by the end of the war. Polish - There were about 200 million Polish soldiers, maybe more. About 50-100 million survived by the end of the war. American - About 60 - 70 million US soldiers entered the World War II. About 59 million survived. Less Jewish people survived because the Germans mainly wanted to kill them (Germans hated Jews), the Germans set up camps and captured the Jews, and killed them off. Less Polish soldiers survived than US ones because Germans directly attacked and invaded Poland, Japanese (Germany's allies during the war) only attacked our Pearl Harbor, so the soldiers went overseas to attack back
86%. The rest died of stupidity.