Of the 9.4 million or so European Jews prior to the Holocaust, only 3.4 million survived. Jews outside of Europe were generally untouched numerically by the Holocaust, so there were about 4.5 million Jews outside of Europe both before and after the Holocaust. This leads to a combined total of 7.9 million Jews in 1946.
Not very many people survived. Nobody knows the exact number but about, 1 in 10 survived which is an estimated.___Less then 1% of the people survived the Holocaust.___One of the problems is that there is no agreed definition of Holocaust survivor. However, please see the related question, which gives a figure of about 200,000.Approximately 3,546,211 people survived the holocaust if one is referring to the number of Jews. The actual number of people cannot be accounted for in that case.
there is no exact number but i do know it was millions of Jews.
The figure OS six million refers to the estimate total number of Jews killed by the Nazis in the Holocaust. (The total number of people killed overall in World War 2 was much higher).
New Answer: The Six Million Innocent people that were killed by the Nazi Regime during World War Two (Because technically Hitler did not kill them personally although he and his fellow Nazi's ordered it as a way to get rid of the Jews) Anne Frank did not survive the Holocaust as she died weeks before Bergen-Belsen was liberated by the Allies. Look up Schindlers list if you happen to be interested in Jews that survived The Holocaust Old answer:Obviously, I can't name all of the people that were killed in WWII. The six million people Hitler and his men killed were Jews. Anne Frank is one that survived, and you should look into that.
About 78% of the Jews in the occupied or war impacted parts of Europe were killed in the Holocaust (also called The Shoa). In some countries, such as Poland and Lithuania, 90% of the Jews died or were killed.
Around 500
How many Jews survived at the end of world war 2
Yes. A small number of Jews survived the Holocaust.
99% of the non combatant jews coming to sweden survived the war.
Just before the Holocaust there were about 18 million Jews world wide, and about one third (33%) were killed in the Holocaust.
There are approximately 12-18 million Jews living in the world today, compared to 6.7 billion non-jews in the world. 41% of Jews in the world are living in Israel.To answer the question:Whatever the exact number is, the surveys are agreed that Jews amount to0.2% (two tenths of one percent) of the world's population. That makes theratio of Jews to non-Jews in the world 1 to 499.
yes, but not all of themAnswer:About two-thirds of European Jews were killed by the Nazis.
There is not an exact number of people who survived. And you did not specify which category of people. Jews - There were about 600 million Jewish people captured by the Germans during World War II, and less than 6,000 survived by the end of the war. Polish - There were about 200 million Polish soldiers, maybe more. About 50-100 million survived by the end of the war. American - About 60 - 70 million US soldiers entered the World War II. About 59 million survived. Less Jewish people survived because the Germans mainly wanted to kill them (Germans hated Jews), the Germans set up camps and captured the Jews, and killed them off. Less Polish soldiers survived than US ones because Germans directly attacked and invaded Poland, Japanese (Germany's allies during the war) only attacked our Pearl Harbor, so the soldiers went overseas to attack back
Those who were in the areas of conflict survived through luck.
There is no specific data available on the exact number of Jews in the world with blue eyes. Eye color is a diverse trait that can vary widely among individuals of any ethnic or religious group.
The exact number is not known, and never will be. It is estimated that at least 6 million Jews in Europe were murdered by Nazi Germany.
Around 10% of Polish Jews survived the Holocaust. This number is particularly low since the Nazi Regime designed the Holocaust to specifically remove Poland's Jewish community. Prior to the war, Poland had 3.3 million Jews, the largest single Jewish community in Europe outside of the USSR. After the war, only 300,000 Polish Jews remained.