Answer 1
Many Jews are going to Germany nowadays in order to revisit their homes. Many Jewish people are from Germany or have family who live in Germany and some are just visiting friends.
Answer 2
It's more that Jews are going to Germany whereas before they conspicuously avoided it. This is a generational issue more than anything else. The older generations, born in the 1930s to 1970s were afraid to come to the land of "the perpetrators", i.e. the former country of the Nazis. They did not want any association with Germany, seeing it as an eternal black mark on the history of humanity.
However, younger generations are more interested in traveling. Israel and the United States currently have very strong relations with Germany. Jews from around the world see that, despite the sporadic surges in anti-Semitism, Germany is a different country today that it was then. Germany has also been one of the fiercest defenders of the historicity of the Holocaust, which shows to many younger Jews that Germany is a current ally in the fight against Anti-Semitism and has come to terms with its horrible past.
Additionally, many Jews of German origin want to see with their own eyes the places that their grandparents described, especially in Berlin (such as synagogues, former butchers and grocers, and some pedallers).
Not many nowadays. At the time of WW2, estimates have guessed as many as six million Jews.
560,000 Jews Lived in Germany prior to the Hitler coming to power
Germany
Jewish people live in many countries, particularly the USA and their 'home': Israel.
Of course there are Jews in Germany, but under no seecomstance is there or has there ever been only Jews. Many different people have different religions every where you go.
523,000! :)
Jews were removed by force from Germany starting in October 1941. By 1944 there were not many Jews left in Germany ...
600,000
There was about half a million Jews in Germany in 1933, this represented less than 1% of the population.
a lot. People are unlikely to answer this question as Germany and other countries have not yet revealed how many have died in Germany so you, nor any other person who wants to find this out, will be able to find out how many Jews have died at the Nazi Germany time.
jew
The Jews had no problem about the Germans, until the Nazis persecuted them and made their lives impossible. In fact, the German Jews and many Jews outside Germany were pro-German till 1933.