Jewish Life in Europe before the Holocaust
When the Nazis came to power in Germany in 1933, Jews
were living in every country of Europe. A total of roughly nine million
Jews lived in the twenty-one countries that would be occupied by Germany
during World War II. By the end of the war, two out of every three of
these Jews would be dead, and European Jewish life would be changed forever.
In 1933 the largest Jewish populations were
concentrated in eastern Europe, including Poland,
the Soviet Union, Hungary, and Romania. Many of
the Jews of eastern Europe lived in predominantly
Jewish towns or villages, called shtetls.
Eastern European Jews lived a separate life as a
minority within the culture of the majority. They
spoke their own language, Yiddish, which combines
elements of German and Hebrew. They read Yiddish
books, and attended Yiddish theater and movies.
Although many younger Jews in larger towns were
beginning to adopt modern ways and dress, older
people often dressed traditionally, the men
wearing hats or caps, and the women modestly
covering their hair with wigs or kerchiefs.
In comparison, the Jews in western
Europe -- Germany, France, Italy, the Netherlands,
and Belgium -- made up much less of the population
and tended to adopt the culture of their
non-Jewish neighbors. They dressed and talked like
their countrymen, and traditional religious
practices and Yiddish culture played a less
important part in their lives. They tended to have
had more formal education than eastern European
Jews and to live in towns or cities.
Jews could be found in all walks of life, as
farmers, tailors, seamstresses, factory hands,
accountants, doctors, teachers, and small-business
owners. Some families were wealthy; many more were
poor. Many children ended their schooling early to
work in a craft or trade; others looked forward to
continuing their education at the university
level. Still, whatever their differences, they
were the same in one respect: by the 1930s, with
the rise of the Nazis to power in Germany, they
all became potential victims, and their lives were
forever changed.
For more information, see "Jewish Population of Europe in 1933" and "Jewish Population of Europe in 1945" in the Holocaust Encyclopedia.
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