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Zenger
Zenger
World
Alberto Arellano

Survey: Half Of Americans Don’t Know How Many Jews Died In The Holocaust

Only 53% of Americans over the age of 18 answered correctly that approximately six million Jews were killed in the Holocaust, according to an American Jewish Committee public opinion survey released ahead of International Holocaust Remembrance Day on Friday. 

View of the Main Gate of the former Nazi German concentration camp Auschwitz II-Brikenau in Brzezinka near Oswiecim on January 22, 2023. When asked how Adolf Hitler became chancellor of Germany, 39% correctly said it was through a democratic political process but 24% chose not sure. JAKOB PORZYCKI/JNS

“Lacking knowledge can open pathways to trivialization and denial of the Holocaust that can also contribute to rising antisemitism,” said American Jewish Committee CEO Ted Deutch. “As we mark International Holocaust Remembrance Day, 78 years after the liberation of Auschwitz, it is imperative that Americans continue to learn about the most documented, planned genocide in modern history—the Nazi extermination of one-third of the Jewish people.” 

Twenty percent of respondents to the American Jewish Committee survey explicitly said they were not sure how many Jews died in the Shoah, 2% said fewer than one million, 13% chose approximately three million and 11% said more than 12 million. 

About three-fourths (76%) of respondents knew that the Holocaust occurred between 1930 and 1950. Ten percent were unsure of the time period while 1% said it was between 1890 and 1910. Ten percent chose between 1910 and 1930 while 2% said it took place between 1950 and 1970. 

Holocaust survivor Martin Stern speaks at a commemorative ceremony at St John’s Smith Square in London ahead of Holocaust Memorial Day. The great majority of respondents (85%) accurately described Auschwitz as a concentration and death camp for Jews. JAMES MANNING/JNS

When asked how Adolf Hitler became chancellor of Germany, 39% correctly said it was through a democratic political process but 24% chose not sure. Thirty-four percent said he came to power by violently overthrowing the German government, 1% said it was through hereditary succession and 2% said it was by agreements with neighboring countries. 

The great majority of respondents (85%) accurately described Auschwitz as a concentration and death camp for Jews. Twelve percent were not sure about its character, and 1% each said it was a school to train Germans in Nazi ideology, a political campaign designed by the Nazis, and a Jewish ghetto. 

Only 26% of survey respondents answered all four questions correctly, while 30% got three correct and 25% had two of the four correct. 

According to the American Jewish Committee, education is a key factor in Americans’ knowledge of the Holocaust. 

“Broadly, those who have completed higher levels of education (some college, college graduates, or more) are more knowledgeable than those who have a high school education or less,” the American Jewish Committee found. “Overall, 34% of those with a college degree and 28% of those who have completed some college answered all four questions correctly, compared with just 17% of those who have a high school degree or less education.” 

On the question of how many Jews were killed, 42% of those with a high school degree or less education correctly answered approximately six million, compared with 62% of those who have completed at least some college and 59% of college graduates. Additionally, 76% of those who have a high school degree or less education correctly answered the question on Auschwitz, compared with 89% of those who completed some college, and 91% of college graduates. 

The survey was conducted by the SSRS non-partisan public opinion research firm on a nationally representative sample of 1,004 general population adults ages 18 or older. It was included as part of a larger national American Jewish Committeesurvey of the general U.S. population on antisemitism. 

This survey—alongside an American Jewish Committee poll of American Jews—will be available next month as part of the AJC’s State of Antisemitism in America 2022 report.

In 2020, a similar poll of American millennials and Generation Z by the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany found a “disturbing” lack of knowledge about the events of the Holocaust.

That survey found that 36% of respondents thought 2 million or fewer Jews had lost their lives while nearly 20% of those asked in New York said the Jews caused the Holocaust. Almost half of the people polled could not name a single concentration camp.

 

Produced in association with Jewish News Syndicate.

(Additional reporting provided by JNS Reporter)

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