"get saved" is a Christian term and concept and does not apply to Judaism. The reason being that the Christian concepts of 'sin' and hell do not exist in Judaism. There is nothing to be saved from.
Therefore, if a Jew were to "get saved" in the traditional Christian theological thought, they would have to convert to Christianity and ask for forgiveness of sins, be baptised and ask Jesus to be their Lord and savior.
10,000
Finland.
Elisabeth Abegg Saved over 50 Jewish Children and An unknown number of Complete Strangers.
saved the lives of many Jewish people who were in concetration camps in WWII
She Queen Esther saved the Jews, from certain death.
Purim.
Most of the Jews in the areas under Nazi control were not saved at all - by anyone - but were killed in the Holocaust. Those Jews that survived did so thanks to the Allied victory over Nazi Germany. There's no single country that can claim to 'have saved the Jews'. However, Denmark can claim to have saved most of its own, Danish Jewish population by shipping them to Sweden before most of them were rounded up for deportation.
The belief that all Jews will be saved in the end varies among different Jewish denominations and interpretations of Jewish teachings. Some believe in the concept of universal salvation, while others believe in the importance of individual actions and repentance. Ultimately, the question of whether all Jews will be saved is a complex and nuanced theological issue that does not have a definitive answer.
The whole megillah means the whole story of Esther and how a poor orphaned Jewish girl became queen "for such a time as this" she saved the Jewish community from annihilation.
Elisabeth saved people because she was a humanitarian and had many Jewish friends.
Irena Sendler saved 2500 jewish children from the ghetto's.
the Bielski brothers saved 1200 Jewish people by the end of the war.