As many French Jews today as before Holocaust. Despite significant declines in Europe’s Jewish population during the  course of  the 20th century,
 nearly as many Jews live in France today as  did prior to the  Holocaust, 
according to the Pew Research Center.
While  the Jewish  population of Europe, which stood at 9.5 million in 1939,  had declined to 1.4  million by 2010, the number of Jews in France [310,000 in 2010] is  almost the same as it was 70  years ago [320,000 in 1939], Pew’s Michael Lipka wrote.  England also maintains a major Jewish  population, albeit reduced from  its pre-war peak of 349,000 by  65,000. [Pew: We estimate that there were about as  many Jews in France as of 2010 (310,000) as DellaPergola estimates there  were in 1939 (320,000), although recent reports have indicated a surge in Jewish emigration from France.]
Throughout the rest of the continent, however, population figures  are a shadow of what they used to be.
Citing  population figures compiled  by Israeli demographer Sergio  DellaPergola, Lipka stated that “there were 3.4  million Jews in the  European portions of the Soviet Union as of 1939” but that  today, only a  “tiny fraction of the former Soviet republics’ population – an   estimated 310,000 people – are Jews.”
Moreover, he added, similar  trends  can be seen in eastern European countries that were outside  Soviet control prior  to the war, such as Poland, Hungary, Romania and  others.  “Collectively,  they were home to about 4.7 million Jews  in 1939, but now there are probably  fewer than 100,000 Jews in all  these countries combined,” he said.
While  the number of Jews  dropped due to the Holocaust and mass emigration that  occurred in the  years following the war, “the Jewish population in Europe has  continued  to decline,” he wrote.
While there were 3.2 million Jews in   Europe in 1960, that number fell to 2 million by 1991, dropping to its  present  level during the decades since the end of the Cold War.
While  much of the  decline can be attributed to emigration to Israel, Pew  believes that “there are  other possible factors in the decline of  European Jewry, including intermarriage  and cultural assimilation.”
Aliya from France has risen significantly  over the past several years due to increased anti-Semitic activity there.
 
 
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