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The Jewish Trail of Tears The Evian Conference of ... - Haruth.com

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APPENDIX A<br />

Country-by-country breakdown <strong>of</strong> <strong>Jewish</strong> refugee immigration, using widely<br />

accepted history texts concerning refugees from Nazism:<br />

Reception <strong>of</strong> <strong>Jewish</strong> refugees, 1933-1945 1<br />

United States<br />

Abella: (14) (1933-45) 200,000<br />

Bauer: (15) (1933-39) 85,000<br />

Marrus: (16) (1940-45) 116,000<br />

(Together, the figures <strong>of</strong> Bauer and Marrus cover the period <strong>of</strong> 1933-1945 and add up to<br />

201,000.)<br />

Tartakower: (17) (1933-43) 190,000<br />

(Add 10,399 for 1944 and 1945, (18) and the 874 who were brought to<br />

Oswego, thus giving a total for 1933-45 <strong>of</strong> 201,273.)<br />

Wyman: (19) (1933-45) 250,518<br />

(Wyman's figure is given as the maximum possible estimate for all<br />

refugees from Nazism. Deduct from that ten percent for the number who<br />

were non-<strong>Jewish</strong> political refugees, and another 15,000 for those who<br />

entered by 1941 with visitor visas and by 1945 had been readmitted as<br />

permanent quota immigrants and were thus included in the 250,518<br />

figure. Accordingly, the maximum number is 210,466.)<br />

Palestine<br />

Bauer: (1933-39) 80,000<br />

Marrus: (1940-45) 58,000<br />

(Together, the figures <strong>of</strong> Bauer and Marrus cover the entire period <strong>of</strong><br />

1933-45 and add up to 138,000.)<br />

Marrus (1933-37) 43,000<br />

Ofer: (20) (1938-39) 40,000<br />

1 Alex Grobman, “A Closer Look at the Use <strong>of</strong> Statistics by Some Critics <strong>of</strong> the Abandonment <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Jews,” Journal <strong>of</strong> Ecumenical Studies, 40, no. 4, 2003, 381.<br />

386

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