280,000 Holocaust Survivors are still alive as of January 2024.
Most of the Holocaust Survivors
live in either Israel or the United States and 1/3 of them live below the
Poverty Line.
In 1945 there were 3.5 Million
Holocaust Survivors.
A Holocaust Survivor is any
Jewish Person who was even 1 minute old from when the Nazis formed Germany’s
Government on January 30, 1933 until the Nazis were defeated on May 8, 1945 and
lived in Nazi Germany or in Nazi-Occupied Europe and North Africa:
Albania, Austria, Belgium,
Bulgaria, the British Channel Islands (Jersey, Guernsey, Helm and Sark),
Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Estonia, France, French North Africa (Algeria, Morocco
and Tunisia), Finland, Greece, Hungary,
Italy, Monaco, Norway, The Netherlands, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Poland,
Romania, the Soviet Union (Belorussia, Moldova, Russia and Ukraine), Yugoslavia
(Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Serbia
and Slovenia.)
A Holocaust Survivor could have
been: Hidden, Forced to Flee as a Refugee, Fought with the Partisans, Fought
with the Resistance, been in a Ghetto, done Forced Labor, been in a Prison,
been in a Concentration Camp, been in a Labor Camp, been in a Death Camp, etc.
A Holocaust Survivor watched
their Friends and Family shot over open pits, pushed into Gas Chambers, worked
to death, starved to death, froze to death. They themselves were beaten, shot,
experimented on, tortured, starved, etc.
A Holocaust Survivor ranges from
79 years old to in their 100s.
I have met a total of 86
Holocaust Survivors (and not all of them while working at the US Holocaust
Museum in Washington DC.)
Every single Holocaust Survivor
deserves to live the rest of their days with no worries about Food, Housing,
Heat, Medicine, being attacked for being Jewish, etc.
January 27, 2024 is the 79th
Anniversary of the Liberation of the Auschwitz Death Camp in German-Occupied
Poland and International Holocaust Remembrance Day.
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