After the Wannsee Conference and the Final Solution, the effects went far beyond the people who were directly involved.
The most obvious impact in the aftermath of the 2nd World War was directly related to the Conference and the Final Solution. It involved the death of approximately 6.3 million Jewish people, and a further 200 000 Jews needed to be liberated from the concentration camps after the Nazis were defeated. No Jews left World War II unscathed; the family and friends of the ones who were murdered, the people who were forced in concentration camps for weeks, months, sometimes years. The Final Solution resulted in the death of millions of people who were discriminated against by the Nazis, but the greatest reduction was in the Jewish population in many countries of Europe, whether they were killed or immigrated to other continents to avoid the psychological scarring they had survived. Some Jews even refused to return to their homes in which they lived from when before the war started, for fear of any possible remaining discrimination. The remaining Jewish were forced to carry on after the genocide inflicted by the Nazis, which in turn, has cast a large stain on the history of Germany.
Jewish people who refused to go home remained in randomly placed person camps, waiting years for immigration to the land set aside by their allies as the new Jewish homeland of Israel. The designation of a new homeland for people of this religion effectively meant that all the scattered Jewish communities in Poland, Italy, Austria and Germany disappeared and relocated into this new state. If the Final Solution had not taken place, there is every chance that the State of Israel itself might not have been created.
The most obvious impact in the aftermath of the 2nd World War was directly related to the Conference and the Final Solution. It involved the death of approximately 6.3 million Jewish people, and a further 200 000 Jews needed to be liberated from the concentration camps after the Nazis were defeated. No Jews left World War II unscathed; the family and friends of the ones who were murdered, the people who were forced in concentration camps for weeks, months, sometimes years. The Final Solution resulted in the death of millions of people who were discriminated against by the Nazis, but the greatest reduction was in the Jewish population in many countries of Europe, whether they were killed or immigrated to other continents to avoid the psychological scarring they had survived. Some Jews even refused to return to their homes in which they lived from when before the war started, for fear of any possible remaining discrimination. The remaining Jewish were forced to carry on after the genocide inflicted by the Nazis, which in turn, has cast a large stain on the history of Germany.
Jewish people who refused to go home remained in randomly placed person camps, waiting years for immigration to the land set aside by their allies as the new Jewish homeland of Israel. The designation of a new homeland for people of this religion effectively meant that all the scattered Jewish communities in Poland, Italy, Austria and Germany disappeared and relocated into this new state. If the Final Solution had not taken place, there is every chance that the State of Israel itself might not have been created.