70% of Jewish Holocaust survivors will be gone in the next 10 years, a
report shows
[April 22, 2025]
By KIRSTEN GRIESHABER
BERLIN (AP) — Eighty years after the Holocaust, more than 200,000 Jewish
survivors are still alive but 70% of them will be gone within the next
10 years — meaning time is running out to hear the voices of the last
generation who suffered through one of the worst atrocities in history.
Currently, the survivors' median age is 87, and more than 1,400 of them
are over 100 years old, a new report said Tuesday.
“We have known that this population of survivors would be the last, our
final opportunity to hear their first-hand testimonies, to spend time
with them, our last chance to meet a survivor," said Greg Schneider, the
executive vice president of the New York-based Conference on Jewish
Material Claims Against Germany, also referred to as the Claims
Conference, which published the study.
The report's analysis of population projections and mortality rates
provides details through 2040. It is based on the extensive data
collected since 1952 by the Claims Conference, which includes survivors
who receive direct payments or social welfare services funded by the
organization as a result of ongoing negotiations with Germany.
90% of Holocaust survivors will pass away in the next 15 years
Notably, nearly 50% of all Holocaust survivors will pass away within the
next six years, while 70% will die within 10 years and 90% within 15
years, according to the report titled “ Vanishing Witnesses."
Those still alive are often of frail health and suffer from ailments
that come with age and have been amplified by traumas in their youth.
Six million European Jews were murdered by the Nazis and their
collaborators during the Holocaust.

It is not clear exactly how many Jews survived the death camps, the
ghettos or somewhere in hiding across Nazi-occupied Europe, but their
numbers were a far cry from the pre-war Jewish population in Europe.
In Poland, of the 3.3 million Jews living there in 1939, only about
300,000 survived.
Around 560,000 Jews lived in Germany in 1933, the year Adolf Hitler came
to power. After the Holocaust, their numbers had diminished to about
15,000 through emigration and extermination.
After the end of World War II, survivors settled all over the globe and
even today they are still living in 90 different countries.
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The railway tracks where hundred thousands of people arrived to be
directed to the gas chambers inside the former Nazi death camp of
Auschwitz Birkenau, or Auschwitz II, are pictured in Oswiecim,
Poland, on Dec. 7, 2019. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber, file)

Mortality rates vary across locations
The “Vanishing Witnesses” report shows that mortality rates for
survivors vary greatly across locations depending on access to
health care and economic stability.
For example, Israel, which is home to about half of all Holocaust
survivors, had 110,100 survivors as of October 2024 and is estimated
to see their population decline to 62,900 by 2030, a drop of 43%.
The United States had 34,600 in the fall of 2024, but is projected
to lose 39% over that same time, dropping to 21,100 survivors.
Countries in the former Soviet Union had 25,500 survivors in October
2024, but are expected to be at 11,800 in five years, down 54 % by
the start of 2030.
“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,” said Gideon Taylor, the president of the Claims Conference.
Many survivors worry who will keep alive their memories
Albrecht Weinberg, a 100-year-old survivor from Germany who lost
almost his entire family in the Holocaust, said that even today the
horrendous memories are haunting him. “I sleep with it, I wake up
with it, I sweat, I have nightmares; that is my present.”
Weinberg survived the concentration and death camps Auschwitz,
Mittelbau-Dora, Bergen-Belsen and three death marches at the end of
the war. He spent many years teaching high school students and
others about the atrocities he had to live through. Still, he
worries what will happen when he is no longer around to bear
witness.
"When my generation is not in this world anymore, when we disappear
from the world, then the next generation can only read it out of the
book.”
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