He didn't, Roosevelt was the President of the United States.
Anne Frank didn't stop the Holocaust. She just made a diary on the thing. The Allies stopped the Holocaust. Anne Frank was just a teenager during the Holocaust. She could not have stopped it. The above answer is correct. See link below for more information.
December 21 2012
Franklin Roosevelt was well informed about what the Nazis were doing. He did not do anything specifically to end the Holocaust. Jan Karski, a member of the Polish resistance and a courier, had two lengthy face-to-face meetings with FDR at the time of the Holocaust. Karski described the conditions in the Warsaw Ghetto and told him about the extermination camps. He implored Roosevelt to do something about it, but according to Karski, Roosevelt merely kept on saying, 'Tell them that the guilty will be punished'. He did not respond to Karski's point that what was need was immediate help.
The Allied forces defeated Germany.
Remembering the one caused by Hitler
President Frankllin D. Roosevelt refused the Jews from The Holocaust, so they had to go back to Europe and suffer during the Holocaust.
Franklin D Roosevelt was president. Not sure about how he felt about it.
Franklin D Roosevelt
You can't.
The Holocaust occurred during WWII and was perpetrated by the Nazis in Europe. VE Day was in May of 1945. Truman became US President 12 April 1945 because of the death of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. So for the Holocaust, Roosevelt was the US President during the Holocaust.
No more than Anne Frank was the cause of the Holocaust.
Anne Frank didn't stop the Holocaust. She just made a diary on the thing. The Allies stopped the Holocaust. Anne Frank was just a teenager during the Holocaust. She could not have stopped it. The above answer is correct. See link below for more information.
The Holocaust was not the fault of the US! It is sometimes said that the US and their Allies did not do much (or anything) to stop the Holocaust. See the related question.
1945
December 21 2012
yes, it was by no means inevitable
Franklin Roosevelt was well informed about what the Nazis were doing. He did not do anything specifically to end the Holocaust. Jan Karski, a member of the Polish resistance and a courier, had two lengthy face-to-face meetings with FDR at the time of the Holocaust. Karski described the conditions in the Warsaw Ghetto and told him about the extermination camps. He implored Roosevelt to do something about it, but according to Karski, Roosevelt merely kept on saying, 'Tell them that the guilty will be punished'. He did not respond to Karski's point that what was need was immediate help.