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Foehrenwald — Map

Major camps for Jewish displaced persons, 1945-1946

 

Following World War II, several hundred thousand Jewish survivors remained in camps for displaced persons. The Allies established such camps in Allied-occupied Germany, Austria, and Italy for refugees waiting to leave Europe. Most Jewish DPs preferred to emigrate to Palestine but many also sought entry into the United States. They decided to remain in the DP camps until they could leave Europe. At the end of 1946 the number of Jewish DPs was estimated at 250,000, of whom 185,000 were in Germany, 45,000 in Austria, and 20,000 in Italy. Most of the Jewish DPs were refugees from Poland, many of whom had fled the Germans into the interior of the Soviet Union during the war. Other Jewish DPs came from Czechoslovakia, Hungary, and Romania.

— US Holocaust Memorial Museum


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Related Holocaust Encyclopedia Articles:

Austria »
Bergen-Belsen Displaced Persons Camp »
Displaced Persons »
Displaced Persons: Administration »
Eschwege »
Feldafing »
Foehrenwald »
Refugees »
The Aftermath of the Holocaust »
The United States and the Holocaust: Postwar American Response to the Holocaust »


Related Articles:

The Survivors »


 

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