What is a "Holocaust Survivor"?
1. Unfortunately there is some confusion and disagreement about what
this term means.
2. Some people use a narrow definition, including
only those who at the start of WWII were living in or citizens
of an area that came under Nazi control. (Note that this does
not mean that they ever actually lived under Nazi control; they
may have escaped after the war started but before the Nazis
actually arrived.) Others use a much broader definition. They
include everyone who was living in such an area at the time Hitler
came to power, even if they emigrated to a safe area long before
the start of the war.
Even within the narrow definition, not every Holocaust survivor
is a concentration camp survivor. Any Jew who survived in hiding,
or by passing as a Gentile, or as a member of the Soviet army,
would be a Holocaust survivor without being a concentration camp
survivor.
3. Some Holocaust deniers try to use this confusion over definition
to dispute the death toll. "If six million really died," they
argue, "there couldn't possibly be that many Holocaust survivors."
This argument trades on the confusion about the meaning of the
term "Holocaust survivor."
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