![]() |
![]() |
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Holocaust
Deaths |
||
|
Country/Region |
Estimate |
|
|
Germany (1938 Borders) |
130,000 |
|
|
Austria |
65,000 |
|
|
Belgium & Luxembourg |
29,000 |
|
|
Bulgaria |
7,000 |
|
|
Czechoslovakia |
277,000 |
|
|
France |
83,000 |
|
|
Greece |
65,000 |
|
|
Hungary & Ukraine |
402,000 |
|
|
Italy |
8,000 |
|
|
Netherlands |
106,000 |
|
|
Norway |
760 |
|
|
Poland & USSR |
4,565,000 |
|
|
Romania |
220,000 |
|
|
Yugoslavia |
60,000 |
|
|
TOTAL |
6,017,760 |
|
|
|
||
The world outside Nazi Europe received numerous press reports in the 1930s
about the persecution of Jews. By 1942 the governments of the United
States and Great Britain had confirmed reports about the Final Solution
- Germany's intent to kill all the Jews of Europe. However, influenced by
antisemitism and fear of a massive influx of refugees, neither country
modified their refugee politics. No specific attempts to stop or slow the
genocide were made until mounting pressure eventually forced the United
States to undertake limited rescue efforts in 1944.
In Europe, rampant antisemitism incited citizens of many German-occupied
countries to collaborate with the Nazis in their genocidal policies. There
were, however, individuals and groups in every occupied nation who, at
great personal risk, helped hide those targeted by the Nazis.
One nation, Denmark,
saved most of its Jews in a nighttime rescue operation in 1943 in which
Jews were ferried in fishing boats to safety in neutral Sweden.
![]()
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
Louis
Bülow ©2009-11 |
|
|