That can't be answered, because genocides are a part of human history. Like wars. You can't count how many wars there have been. Too many go unrecorded.
The Jewish population has historically been the target of the most genocides, with events such as the Holocaust during World War II being one of the most well-known examples. Other groups that have been targeted in multiple genocides include Armenians and indigenous peoples in various regions.
Estimates vary, but it is generally believed that around 70-85 million people have died in various conflicts and genocides since World War II.
The Holocaust during World War II is considered one of the deadliest genocides in history, with approximately six million Jews killed.
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No Earth women have ever been on the moon, but many have been over the moon.
Yes, there have been multiple genocides after the Holocaust.
The Genocides has 143 pages.
There have been genocides in 42+ countries. Here are a few: guatemala, rwanda, and cambodia.
Yes
There have been many genocides all over the world, so you have to be more specific.
Yes, genocides have happened in places such as Rwanda and Cambodia.
There have been many genocides all over the world, so your question is a bit too unspecific to answer.
Genocides have been happening throughout human history, from ancient times, up to modern times, so it has been happening in many, many years.
The Genocides was created in 1965.
over 100000 if you count the genocides going on as murders
Yes. Jews have been deliberately killed at many points in history. Many genocides such as the Holocaust and "smaller" pogroms such as the Kishinev Pogrom have been designed to deliberately kill Jews. Jews have also been kill incidentally in other conflicts.
That can't be answered. Genocides have always been a part of human history. The Holocaust was not a unique event. The American Indian and the Australian Aborigine were genocide targets. Other examples are available in more recent times like Kosovo, Rwanda, Burundi, Sierra Leone, East Timor, Cambodiia and Yugoslavia.