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.
Probably Poland, which lost about 90% of its 3.3 million Jews and a further 2.5 million people.
Poland lost about 3 million Jews out of a pre-war total of about 3.3 million. In other words the Polish Jews accounted for about half the total number of Jews that perished in the Holocaust.
assuming that you mean that the first country effected was Germany, then the second would be the Soviet Union
Poland, There massive jew population was literally crushed by the ghettos and death camps.
The three most affected were no doubt Germany, Poland and the Ukraine.
those who were a part of it will never cease to be affected by it.
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.
UruguayOther 'candidates' include:IndiaNew Zealand (took in fewer than 1,000 refugees)ThailandTurkey (took in about 1,000 refugees)
After the end of World War II, Britain underwent enormous social change and the country was bankrupted after the war.
The Jews and Gypsies within the ghetto were the most affected.
The three most affected were no doubt Germany, Poland and the Ukraine.
Spain was not affected by the holocaust. Germany was the sole cause of the holocaust and never controlled Spain.
Japan is a country that is most affected by them
The US Constitution was not affected by Holocaust.
No.
Japan is a country that is most affected by them
Poland
yes
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.
Botswana
England