Restoring a Pre-Holocaust Lost Population
"The Jewish population has not returned to what it was before the war, so this is quite impressive to think that the Holocaust of the Jews is still visible. The damage is still visible and not yet recovered to its early dimensions.""[Declining numbers in countries are attributed to] low birth rates, frequent intermarriage, identificational drift, aging, and emigration.""[COVID-19] caused dramatic increase in the cases of death and decline in certain parts of the world, slowing [the] rate of growth.""Jews who also hold another religious identification [are excluded from the tally along with] non-Jews of Jewish ancestry [and non-Jews with] family connections to Jews.""[A result of living in contemporary society is] much greater interaction with different groups. We wish to keep a definition which is more or less similar to what the situation was in past generations.""If you wish to compare [the Jewish] population of today with a population fifty or 100 years ago, these interactions did not exist very much."Sergio Della Pergola, professor emeritus, co-author, annual survey, Hebrew University, Jerusalem
Israel: 6,153,500 (grew 10.2%)
United States: 5,700,000 (grew 5.1%)
France: 453,000 (shrank 5.6%)
Canada: 395,000 (grew 5.3%)
United Kingdom: 290,000 (shrank 0.3%)
Argentina: 180,300 (shrank 0.8%)
Russia: 172,000 (shrank 11.3%)
Germany: 116,000 (shrank 2.5%)
Australia: 113,400 (grew 1.3%)
Brazil: 93,200 (shrank 2.2%)
"The large Soviet Jewish population in areas that the Germans failed to occupy began to leave in the late 1970s because of discrimination in the U.S.S.R. and the possibility of a better life abroad.""Similar stories on a much smaller scale occurred earlier in several Soviet bloc countries."Professor Daniel Stone, study of Jewish history in the Soviet Union, University of Winnipeg"Throughout history, the inherent weakness of a landless and powerless minority vis-a-vis territorially based societies and their constituted powers often put the Jewish people in a condition of dependency and instability, and translated into powerful ups and downs in the Jewish presence."Institute for Jewish Policy Research study
The
results of a demographic study of worldwide Jewish populations
illuminates the fact that world Jewry has failed, over the course of 80
years since the beginning of the Second World War, to restore its
presence to pre-Holocaust numbers. A reality that testifies to the
success of the Nazi plan to destroy the presence of Europe's Jews.
Europe, before the war, held a major share of the world's population of
Jews. At the present time, Jewish presence in Europe totals 1.3 million,
roughly 0.1 of its entire population. And of that number the presence
of Jews in Europe is shrinking with time.
Two
of every three Jews living in Europe during the war years was caught up
in the vast genocidal project of Nazi Germany to exterminate all of
Europe's Jews, an ambition that succeeded in annihilating six million
Jewish children and adults. A systematic, collaborative plan that
succeeded so well that numbers have still not returned to what they were
pre-Holocaust. At the current level, the Jewish global community
numbers almost 15 million people. In 1939 that number was 16.5 million,
according to the World Jewish Population report of 2020.
Hebrew
University of Jerusalem carries out an annual survey, drawing on data
it finds available on 100 countries in a count of the core population of
ethnic and religious Jewish numbers. Israel was seen with a strong
positive growth rate in its Jewish population, an estimated 3% yearly
growth, given a high birth rate and immigration. Stable or declining
figures were seen elsewhere. Overall, there was a 92,400 increase from
2019 figures to 2020 in Israel. 46 percent of the world's Jewish
population lives in Israel, with the United States accounting for 39
percent.
Canada
is identified as one of the few countries where its demographic of Jews
has been on a slow increase, centering in the Greater Toronto area,
which includes people coming from "Russia, Israel and Iran". Canada is
home to an estimated 400,000 Jews, representing the fourth-highest
concentration of Jews in the world, according to the report. Most other
countries' Jewish population were found to be in decline, to which "low birth rates, frequent intermarriage, identification drift, aging and emigration" are mostly attributed.
Israel's
'law of return' enables those of Jewish descent to immigrate,
contributing to Israel's growth rate within the general population.
Approaching numbers that existed before the catastrophic death toll of
the Holocaust years "may take decades" more, the report stated. The
population of Jews in Europe is lower than it has been in over a
thousand years, and is declining further, according to a study from the
Institute for Jewish Policy Research, issued in 2020. Some nine percent
of the global Jewish population lives in Europe. It was almost 90
percent in the late 19th Century.
France,
the United Kingdom and Germany host most of the European Jewish
population. Eastern Europe records the largest losses, much of it
occasioned after the collapse of the former Soviet Union. A large
majority of East European Jews were murdered during the Holocaust,
leading to many survivors vacating territories post-WWII they considered
to be hostile to their presence. Those Jews who lived in Poland, and
Soviet citizens had the highest casualties during the Holocaust,
according to figures produced by the U.S.Holocaust Memorial Museum.
Close
to two million Jews in the past half-century, left Eastern Europe, in
search of better opportunities, while countries in Western Europe saw a
loss of some 8.5 percent of their Jewish populations.
Labels: 'Final Solution', Current World Jewish Population, European Jewry, Genocide, Holocaust, Nazi Extermination
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