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Half of Holocaust survivors will be lost by 2035, Claims Conference predicts

The organisation also predicted that there would be almost nobody left with first hand experience of the Shoah by 2040

April 22, 2025 09:25
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Fewer than half of all Holocaust survivors worldwide are predicted to remain in 2035, according to a new report from the Claims Conference (Image: Getty)

By

JC Reporter,

Jewish News Syndicate

3 min read

A new report from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany has provided “sobering insights into the future of this incredible community”, predicting that fewer than half will still be with use in ten years time.

Some 1,400 (0.6 per cent) of the estimated 220,800 survivors in 90 countries today are centenarians, and half of the survivors live in Israel, according to the Conference, which estimates that it will distribute about $530 million in compensation this year to Holocaust survivors worldwide, and $960 million for welfare needs of survivors. The median age of survivors is 87.

The nonprofit’s new report, titled Vanishing Witnesses: An Urgent Analysis of the Declining Population of Holocaust Survivors, projects that just half of Holocaust survivors worldwide will remain in six years.

Likewise, just 30 per cent, or about 66,250, are predicted to remain in 2035. By 2040, just 22,080 survivors will still be living worldwide, the report suggests.

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