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Where did the Jews go when they left Germany?

Updated: 8/16/2019
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Some Jews fled to South America, to countries such as Brazil where a limited amount of visas were provided (about 200 for thousands of applicants). They were rejected at a lot of countries borders (such as USA) due to the lack of jobs and American hostility towards immigrants "taking their jobs". Basically, they went wherever they would be accepted - France, Denmark, UK, Canada, etc.

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Q: Where did the Jews go when they left Germany?
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What year did the Germans take away rights from Jews?

Jews were removed by force from Germany starting in October 1941. By 1944 there were not many Jews left in Germany ...


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Of course there are Jews in Germany, but under no seecomstance is there or has there ever been only Jews. Many different people have different religions every where you go.


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All the jews had to go to the death camps...


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403,000 Jews left Germany and Austria in 1938 and 1939.


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they had nowhere else to go to.


Were any Jews ever released from concentration camps by the Nazis?

In 1938-39 a number of Jews were released on condition that they left Germany within two weeks.


Why did hitler want war against jews?

He didn't want war, he didn't need to go to war with the Jews. He wanted them liquidated from earth. He just rounded up Jews and sent them to camps to be killed. The Jews as a whole where very passive in their demise in Germany. Some left the country when they saw the writing on the wall but most didn't.


Why did the Jews leave their homeland and go to Germany?

because they faced persecution in their own countries.


What percentage of the Jewish population left Germany?

Hitler managed to wipe away 99% of the Jews from Germany. Only 1% survived._________The above answer is inaccurate. In 1933, when the Nazis came to power in Germany, there were about 525,000 Jews in the sense of registered members of Jewish congregrations. In addition, there were about a further 300,000(?) people regarded by the Nazis as ethnic Jews.Between 1933 and 1941 the US accepted about 250,000 refugees from Germany (and from 1938 also Austria). Britain accepted 71,000 refugees before the outbreak of war in 1939, and many other countries accepted some refugees. Obviously, by no means all of these refugees were Jews in either of the above senses.The total number of German Jews killed in the Holocaust is generally given as about 165,000.'... left Germany' does not necessarily mean 'survived the Holocaust'. German Jews who fled to France, Belgium and the Netherlands did not survive in many cases. In order to avoid double counting, German Jews who went to France and other countries are not included in the figure of 165,000. This figure refers to the death toll of German Jews deported from Germany. (Sorry it's a bit complicated). Neverless, the claim that 99% of German Jews were exterminated is wrong.According to the Wikipedia article on the Hsitory of the Jews in Germany, "Of the 522,000 Jews living in Germany in January 1933, only 214,000 were left by the eve of World War II". This would suggest that about 308,000 Jews left Germany in this period. However, the birth-rate among the Jewish population in Germany fell sharply after the Nazis came to power.


How did adolf Hitler's persecution of Jews help help the nazi party secure power in Germany?

He blamed Jews for Germany's problems and encouraged Germans to join the Nazis in attacking Jews.


Why didnt all Jews migrate from Germany?

If you asking about the situation before WWII See the answer to the related question Why didn't the Jews leave Germany? During the War, Jews were considered Enemy Aliens and only could go to a neutral country like Switzerland. Switzerland accepted a limited number of Jews during the war. The rest were turned back to Germany. As for the situation after WWII Most had already left Germany before WWII, and the ones that remained were killed or sent to concentration camps, where the majority died. Some did come back and lived in Germany, because it was occupied by the Allied countries and they were protected. Jews without homes (mostly women and children) were taken to Displaced Persons (DP) camps and fed better than the average German. In Poland, after the War, many Jews were threatened and even killed on occasion, when they tried to reclaim their homes and other property. The Polish government gave very little protection to the Jews, and 99% left to Israel and America. Surprisingly, for a few years after WWII, Germany was one of the safest place for Jews to be. In Russia, many Jews starved to death right after the war, along with many other Russian citizens.


Where did the Jews go to extermination camps?

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