
Our numbers are a drop in the bucket; Jews are endangered.
There are only some 15-16 million Jews left in the world—15.7 million according to the Jewish Agency, 2023. That’s still less than pre-Holocaust.
- 🇮🇱 Israel 7.2 mil
- 🇫🇷 France 440k
- 🇺🇸 USA 6.3 mil
- 🇨🇦 Canada 398k
- 1939 Jewish global population: 16.7 mil
- 🇮🇱✡️ 1 Jewish nation
- 🕌☪️ 49 Muslim nations
- 🇦🇲✝️ 15 Christian nations (officially), including the ethnostate of Armenia, that no one is seriously trying to destroy
- ⛪️✝️ 116 nations with 50% or more Christian population (58.58% of 198 nations)
🇨🇳 Only 5% of China is Christian; that still makes it a top 10 nation for Christianity by adherents at 67 million, some 4 times the number of Jews in the world
📈 If the Holocaust and its related genocides (see Farhud) hadn’t occurred, there would be 3-4 times as many Jews alive today; some 60-75 million estimated, and still possibly smaller than the Christian population of China alone
Populations Less Well Known and Yet Larger Than Jews:
- Kurds, 30-45 million
- Sikhs, 25-30 million
- 🇪🇨 Ecuadorans, 17 million
- Mormons, 16.6 million
Can we have just one nation?
- There are over 127 Muslims for every Jew; they get 49 countries, 1 in 4 states in the world where Muslims are safe.
- There are 152 Christians for every Jew.
- They are the majority in 116 nations; 60% of the world’s states.
Only one of the groups above has been genocided and repeatedly so; it was by the other groups. Jews have 1 nation, always have, and never left it, and our genocides only happened to us because we lost control of our country to empires (actual colonizers).
| Group | Pop | % of 🌍 | Nations | Factor |
| Christians | 2.38 bil | 29.75% | 116 | 152x |
| Muslims | 2.00 bil | 25.00% | 49 | 127x |
| Arabs | 465 mil | 05.8125 | 22 | 30x |
| Jews | 15.7 mil | 00.19625 | 1 | 1 |
In 1939, Jews were 0.7% of the world population. Today, 0.2%. Not only has this percentage gone down tremendously, but the average person overestimates the number of Jews in the world by many orders of magnitude.

