Had the Holocaust Not Happened, How Many Jews Would be Alive Today? A Survey of Jewish Demography, 1890–2000doi:10.1080/17504902.1997.11087052Sander A. DiamondRoutledgeJournal of Holocaust Education
The UN Secretary General Kofi Anna remained General Assembly members that the horrors of the Holocaust had helped to shape the mission of the UN. He said while there were many other victims of the Nazis, the tragedy of Jewish people was unique. The Nobel Peace Prize winner Elie Wiesel who ...
How many people lived in the U.S. in 1900? How many Jews lived in Europe before the Holocaust? How many died in the European Wars of Religion? How many people traveled in the Crusades? How many people lived in Charlemagne's Aachen?
How many people took part in the Peasants' Revolt? How many non-Jews were killed in the Holocaust? How many Jewish people were killed during The Holocaust? How many Jewish people survived the Holocaust? How many people died in the Bolshevik Revolution?
The line was two blocks long, and they had no idea that they were next in line for the crematorium. They naively thought they were waiting to get jobs. The Nazi’s couldn’t burn us fast enough. There were too many Jews for the the amount of ovens, and people always had to wait....
Stalin is often compared to Adolf Hitler, who killed some 6 million Jews in the Holocaust. In the Ottoman Empire in the early part of the 1900s, leaders carried out the near-genocide of millions of Armenians. Many millions died as the result of Japanese war crimes during World War II un...
The astonishing results change the view of Jewish resistance during World War II dramatically. The story of Hertha Reis and many other potent tales of individual defiance and courage contradict the common misconception that Jews were led like sheep to slaughter during the Holocaust. ...
to ensure that the three of them survived, so that they could go on to live wonderful, full lives. I have also carried out extensive research into their story and the plight of the Jewish people from Slovakia and been given access to the research department at Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum ...
As hard as it is in times of pain, Jews have always sought to observe holidays during persecution, such as in concentration camps during the Holocaust, said Rabbi Martin Lockshin, professor emeritus at Canada’s York University, who lives in Jerusalem. ...
Although as a society we may wish for these events to be kept forever as a reminder to the future, things like the Yolocaust project, in which Shahak Shapira documented tourists being disrespectful at Eisenman’s Holocaust memorial, remind us that architecture cannot force people to reflect, ...