Search results
Though the two institutions have different estimates, if you average the total number of Jews each says were murdered, the result is the commonly used figure of six million.
- Wannsee Conference
The “Wannsee Conference” was a high-level meeting of Nazi...
- Documents Regarding Mass Murder
Letter from SS Major-General Stahlecker to SS General...
- Testimony of Crematorium Engineers
As I mentioned at the beginning, I was in the extermination...
- Deportation of Austrian & German Jews
The embarkation of the Jews to the freight cars of the...
- Himmler Orders Completion of The Final Solution
For all these reasons a total cleansing is necessary and...
- Creating the Master Race
From 1933 to 1945, Nazi Germany’s government led by Adolf...
- Remarks by Himmler
From the speech of Reichsführer-SS Himmler, speaking to SS...
- Background & Overview
The “Final Solution of the Jewish Question“ (in German...
- Wannsee Conference
Number of victims of the Holocaust and Nazi persecution 1933-1945, by background. Most estimates place the total number of deaths during the Second World War at around 70-85 million...
16 wrz 2014 · At the outbreak of the Second World War, it is estimated that there were 3.4 million Jews living in Poland, which was approximately ten percent of the total population.
The play, titled The Last Two Jews of Kabul, was written by playwright Josh Greenfeld and was staged in New York in 2002. In January 2005, Levy died of natural causes, leaving the world believing Simintov was the sole known Jew in Afghanistan. [ 19 ]
3 lip 2024 · Excluding Jews, almost 11 million civilians or POWs from Poland, the USSR, and Yugoslavia were killed by the Nazis and their collaborators, but classifying these deaths is often problematic.
A month later, it was discovered that Simentov may not have been the last Jew living in Afghanistan; Tova Moradi, a distant relative of Simintov, fled to Albania with her 20 grandchildren in October 2021.
A report published by the Russian Academy of Sciences in 1995 put the death toll due to the German occupation at 13.7 million civilians (including Jews): 7.4 million victims of Nazi genocide and reprisals; 2.2 million persons deported to Germany for forced labor; and 4.1 million famine and disease deaths in occupied territory. Sources published ...