No, the Danish Jews escaped by boats to Sweden and stayed there during the rest of the war (apart from a small minority going back to Denmark to join the resistance). I assume you don't refer to the few days - maximum weeks - that Jews would have to be in hiding (from the disclosure of the deportation plans) until they could get on a boat to Sweden - in that waiting period they would of course be hidding by Danes.
the rescuers.
Yea, and it was the Nazis that hid them and tortured them in Germany
by boat
They fled to Sweeden.
rg
nobody the Jews hid themselves.
Ellen and her family, like many other Danish Jews, went to Sweden by boat.
No. At least 60 Danish Jews perished in camps.
many Jews hid in disused buildings.
the rescuers.
They did not exist.
Yea, and it was the Nazis that hid them and tortured them in Germany
by boat
They fled to Sweeden.
Most of the Danish Jewish refugees fled to Sweden.
Yes, Jews caught hiding were subjected to extra punishments.
He publicly declared that regardless of German assertions to the contrary, that Danish Jews were just as Danish as Danish non-Jews. he is also rumored to have worn the Jewish Star as a symbol of solidarity between all Danish people. Because King Christian X took this attitude, many Danes saw it as their patriotic duty to the Fatherland to save Danish Jews. This resulted in the most successful preservation of any European country's Jewish population through the war.