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Fewer than 200,000 Holocaust survivors remain as antisemitism rises globally

The number of living Holocaust survivors has dropped below 200,000 for the first time, a new demographic study has found.

Why it matters: The stark milestone comes as antisemitism rises globally and Holocaust denial spreads online.


The big picture: Child survivors, the last generation of the Holocaust, are aging as advocates race to record their testimonies and fight online misinformation threatening to erase survivors' stories.

By the numbers: The number of Jewish Holocaust survivors alive worldwide has fallen to around 196,600, according to the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany (Claims Conference).

  • That's down 220,000 survivors from a year ago — an 11% drop, the Claims Conference said.
  • The median age of survivors is now 87, with many now in their 90s and older, numbers show.
  • Nearly all Jewish Holocaust survivors (97%) are "child survivors" who were born in 1928 or later.

Zoom in: Nearly half of all survivors live in Israel, while about one in six live in the United States, highlighting where survivor care, education and remembrance efforts are most urgently concentrated.

  • Around 11% reside in countries of the former Soviet Union.
  • The majority of Jewish Holocaust survivors are women (62%), and only 38% of the population are men.

Zoom out: The latest data comes nearly a year after the Claims Conference released a report called "Vanishing Witnesses" that estimated around 70% of the world's Holocaust survivors will be gone in the next 10 years.

  • "This report is a stark reminder that our time is almost up. Our survivors are leaving us, and this is the moment to hear their voices," Claims Conference president Gideon Taylor said in April.

State of play: Anti-Jewish hate crimes and antisemitic episodes have steadily increased since the two years after the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel.

Yes, but: Coalitions of allied groups and Jewish-led organizations are fighting back with public campaigns and small gatherings to push back on the bigotry.

  • For example, JewBelong, the nonprofit known nationally for its pink-and-white billboards confronting antisemitism, last week debuted a new NYC campaign featuring digital taxi toppers across 4,000 cabs.

The intrigue: Despite rising misinformation and efforts to distort or erase Holocaust history, new films debuting around Holocaust Remembrance Day are doubling down on primary evidence and survivor voices.

  • A new Polish HBO documentary, "33 Photos From the Ghetto," uncovers the only known civilian photographs taken inside the Warsaw Ghetto during the 1943 uprising. It will be available to stream on HBO Max on Tuesday and is directed by Jan Czarlewski.
  • A preview shared with Axios showed a powerful mystery around the photographs of 23-year-old Polish firefighter Zbigniew Leszek Grzywaczewski and the journey to get them into the public memory.

"American Masters: Elie Wiesel — Soul on Fire" also premieres Tuesday on PBS stations with first-person narration from the Nobel laureate.

  • The documentary blends archival footage, classroom scenes and interviews with family and traces how Wiesel's survival of Auschwitz and Buchenwald shaped a lifetime of writing, teaching and moral leadership.

What we're watching: Ancestry.com announced it's releasing more than 10 million newly indexed Holocaust records, free to the public.

  • Through its ongoing partnership with the Arolsen Archives, Ancestry completed the first-ever full indexing of Arolsen's concentration camp lists comprised of over 8 million records and 500,000 images.
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