All over the world, but especially in Europe, the US and some parts of North Africa and the Middle East.
1. The US
2. Poland
3. Hungary
4. Soviet Union (especially Ukraine and Belarus)
5. Palestine
6. Romania
They were pretty well off. Germany was one of the most liberal and safe places for Jews in Europe from the 1700s up until the Holocaust.
By the start of the Holocaust the (affected) Jews had already suffered many years of discrimination, most Jews in Poland were in ghettos, Jews in Germany had most of their rights taken away from them.
Hitler's Germany began the holocaust against Jews before the start of World War II.The primary events during the war that contributed to the holocaust: The genocide against Jews expanded into each country that Germany conquered.
After the Holocaust most people went back to their homes but instead of finding their homes their neighborhoods were destroyed. So techniquelly there is no answer to this question because we simply don't know unless we were in the holocaust ourselves.
The exact number of Jews saved in the holocaust is impossible to calculate. It is recorded that in Denmark, 7,220 of its 8,000 Jews were saved by fellow citizens. Thousands in other countries were also saved by friends and neighbors as they were or smuggled into safe countries. Many Jews fled before the worst of the holocaust was upon them, while others pretended to be non-Jewish. The numbers liberated from the infamous death camps by allied forces is also uncertain, but the numbers are in the tens of thousands if not higher.
They were pretty well off. Germany was one of the most liberal and safe places for Jews in Europe from the 1700s up until the Holocaust.
Most were.
By the start of the Holocaust the (affected) Jews had already suffered many years of discrimination, most Jews in Poland were in ghettos, Jews in Germany had most of their rights taken away from them.
Prejudice affected Jews during the Holocaust because even before the Holocaust it was all around the and during the Holocaust because the Nazi's and the SS enforced it heavily. Non-Jews were affected by it because it made them look at it with a whole new perspective.
In April 1933 the Nazi regime dismissed most Jews and people of Jewish origin from public sector jobs in Germany - in other words, well before the start of the Holocaust. It was the very first Nazi measure against the Jews.
Poland
Jews from most of Europe.
most of them would die in the Holocaust.
Hitler's Germany began the holocaust against Jews before the start of World War II.The primary events during the war that contributed to the holocaust: The genocide against Jews expanded into each country that Germany conquered.
Most were murdered by the Nazis.
the countries of the Pale of Settlement had the most Jews and also lost the most.
There ARE Jews in Germany, but the Holocaust destroyed most of the population.