Before the war, and according to the world almanac, ""World Almanac, 1938, pg. 510 -- world jewish population = 15,748,091""
After the war, "World Almanac USA, 1947, pg. 748: World Jewish Population -- 15,690,000"
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The World Almanac was notoriously unreliable on this at the time and later revised its figures for the whole period 1938-1948. The real figures are about 16 million in 1939 and 10 million in 1945. See the link - scroll down to the section 'Jewish Population'.
dear sir, I m new about studying Holocaust matter.I would like to ask you why the World Almanac is not notoriuosly unreliable on the period 1939-1946. I would like to know where did you get the statistic about jewish popupalation of 16 millions in 1939 and 10 million in 1945. How it's possible to determine the real popoluation of the jewish population between 1939 to 1945.
I waiting for your kind reply.
About two-thirds of the Jews in Europe were killed, which is equivalent to about one third worldwide.
3.7 %The population of people who were alive in 1939 before the Second World War was 1,961,913,000 (2 billion) and the population who died during the War could be as high as 72,707,700 which is about 3.7% of the world's population. That's25,160,000 military deaths41,793,300 civilian deaths5,754,400 Jewish Holocaust deaths___________72,707,700
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.
Probably Poland, prior to the war they had the largest Jewish popluation of any country in Europe, and after the war they were nearly all gone. _______ Poland lost about 88-89% of its Jewish population in the Holocaust and Lithuania lost about 96%!
The Nazis rounded up Jews and sent them to special camps where they were killed. The European Jewish population in 1950 was 3.5 million people in contrast to the 1933 European Jewish population of 9.5 million people (a difference of 6 million people whence the 6 million number comes). 2 million of the 3.5 million remaining Jews were in the Soviet Union.
All sites do not agree, but according to the Jewish Virtual Library site, the world Jewish population in 2012 was 13,746,100. That figure is the same on the Jewish People Around the World site for December 11, 2013. For more information, visit the Related Links. _________________________________________________________________ The worldwide Jewish population is 13.3 million Jews. Jewish population growth worldwide is close to zero percent. From 2000 to 2001 it rose 0.3%, compared to worldwide population growth of 1.4%. Refer to link 3 below.
In 1925 the Jewish population of Berlin was about 150,000.
In all the world's population, about 1/5 of 1 percent is Jewish.
The total worldwide Jewish population (including Israel) is about 14 million. Of those, about 6 million are in Israel.
During the Holocaust, approximately six million Jews were killed, which represented about 67% of the Jewish population in Europe at that time. Overall, this amounted to about 40% of the global Jewish population before World War II. The Holocaust remains one of the most devastating genocides in history, significantly impacting Jewish communities worldwide.
Poland. Just before the start of World War 2 Poland had a Jewish population of about 3.3 million.
According to the TIME/Britannica Almanac 2010, worldwide adherents to Judaism as of mid-2009 numbered some 15.9 million, in 135 countries, equivalent to roughly 0.2% (two tenths of one percent) of the world's population.
About two-thirds of the Jews in Europe were killed, which is equivalent to about one third worldwide.
Poland had the largest Jewish population in Europe before World War II, with approximately 3.3 million Jews residing there.
arab actions against the jewish population there
Before the Holocaust, in 1933, the Jewish population in Europe was approximately 9.5 million. By the end of World War II in 1945, it is estimated that around 6 million Jews were murdered in the Holocaust, resulting in a significant decline in the Jewish population. Post-war, the Jewish population in Europe was roughly 3.5 million, reflecting the devastating impact of the Holocaust on Jewish communities.
a lot more than afterwards many were executed