Why does Germany still have 14,200 Holocaust survivors?
How many remain to tell their stories?
Let’s break down the 2023 data – and what these numbers mean before history slips away.
Holocaust Survivors by Country (2023 Estimates)
- 🇮🇱 Israel: 119,300
- 🇺🇸 USA: 38,400
- 🇫🇷 France: 21,900
- 🇷🇺 Russia: 18,200
- 🇩🇪 Germany: 14,200
- 🇺🇦 Ukraine: 7,400
- 🇨🇦 Canada: 5,800
- 🇭🇺 Hungary: 3,500
Source: Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany
3 Surprising Truths Behind the Numbers
- Israel’s 119K survivors: Many fled post-war USSR in the 1990s. Average age: 85. 65% live below the poverty line.
- Germany’s 14K: Mostly Eastern Europeans who settled post-reunification. 40% rely on Claims Conference pensions.
- Ukraine’s 7.4K: 60% are war refugees again – fleeing Russian strikes while reliving WWII trauma.
Why These Numbers Are Urgent
Holocaust survivors are aging fast. By 2030, 97% will be gone.
Their needs now:
- Home care (40% need daily assistance)
- Winter heating (30% in Ukraine lack reliable heat)
- Pandemic recovery (Isolation spiked depression rates)
FAQs: What People Ask About Survivors
- “Why does Russia have 18K survivors?”
- Soviet Jews liberated in 1945 stayed silent under Stalin. Many emigrated to Israel/Germany after USSR collapsed.
- “How are these numbers tracked?”
- The Claims Conference verifies Nazi persecution records. Less than 1% of applicants fake claims.
- “Can I help survivors directly?”
- Yes. Groups like Claims Conference fund medical care. $350/month covers a survivor’s medicine.
The Silent Crisis: Poverty in Survival
55% of survivors globally live on less than $23/day.
In Hungary? 80% can’t afford dental care.
In France? 1 in 4 skips meals to pay rent.
Surviving the camps didn’t mean escaping hardship.
Bottom Line: Listen Before It’s Too Late
These numbers aren’t stats – they’re people.
Like 91-year-old Sarah in Berlin, who fled Kyiv last year.
Or Moshe in Tel Aviv, whose $400/month pension doesn’t cover insulin.
Their stories vanish daily. Act now – donate, volunteer, or simply bear witness.