EeneyMinnieMoe
Philosopher
- Joined
- Feb 11, 2007
- Messages
- 7,221
It's very difficult to get an accurate number. Documentation is sparse and contradictory. However, there seems to be a kind of consensus on the "six million" figure from what little I've read.
Also, there were lots of other people killed - not just jews; if somebody might have been jewish but was killed for some other reason, do you count them among the six million? What about people in camps who died of disease/starvation after the nazis retreated? What about somebody who was summarily executed because some nazi on the spot thought they were jewish, whereas in fact they weren't? What if multiple sources disagree on the population of some jewish village before it was wiped off the map? What about people who died after being recaptured by soviets? It would be almost impossible to count "from the bottom up". However, counting from the "top down" has just as many flaws...
But why get hung up on it? Several million jews were killed - and so were several million non-jews. That's an appalling atrocity regardless of the exact number.
The way that Holocaust figures were counted was by the following way: for every country in Europe, the estimated Jewish population before the war is compared to the number of survivors left in each country after the end of WW2. Then the number of survivors is subtracted from the number of the original pre-war population. That's how historians eached a figure of 6 million. Estimated figure, that is.
I certainly consider my father's mother and her relatives that survived to be Holocaust survivors, even though they themselves are not Jewish. I have sworn to never forget the atrocities perpetuated upon them by the Nazis and upon the Polish and Jewish people as a whole. This is enspecially important given that there are people today who claim that it didn't happen. Allthough I don't think these so-called people deserve to be mentioned in the same sentence as my family, we are living proof that it did happen.
