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Demography of Austrian Jews 1938 - 1945
The persecution by the Nazi regime brought about a radical change in the demography of Austrian Jewry.
The Jewish population which in March 1938 amounted to about 206,000 persons, or three
percent of the total population, and of whom 181,000 were members of the Israelitische
Kultusgemeinde, was decimated through expulsion and murder in a disastrous way. Vienna's
Jewish community - at one time one of the biggest of the world, almost unparalleled in its
cultural diversity and uniqueness - was basically annihilated, and the other Jewish communities
in Austria were more or less completely destroyed.
Decisive factors of this demographic "development" are the following:
- On account of the "Nuremberg Laws" which were introduced in the "Ostmark" in May 1938,
over 24,000 people who had renounced Judaism but had
Jewish ancestry, were classified as Jews.
- Over 4,900 people, who were not considered to be Jews according to the "Nuremberg Laws"
(most of whom had converted to Judaism through marriage), were more or less forced
by the Nazi regime to renounce their faith and be reclassified as non-Jews.
- Immediately after March 12, 1938, the Nazi rulers started to expulse over
130,000 people by means of physical and psychological terror. Over 16,000 of these were subsequently
exterminated in other Nazi-occupied European countries.
- Internments in concentration camps of far more than 7,000 people which started on April 1, 1938,
led to the death of almost 2,000 camp inmates.
- From early 1941 onwards, about 48,000 people from Vienna were deported to ghettos,
concentration and extermination camps. Less than 2,000 survived.
- Only about 5,500 practising Jews or Austrians with Jewish origins survived the Nazi regime in Austria.
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Demography of Austrian Jews from March 13 to December 31, 1938
Results of the national census of May 17, 1939. Jews in Austria
Demography of Austrian Jews from 1938 to 1945
Deportations from Austria
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