This is hard to say because many, if not all, the countries had absolutely no clue what the Nazi Party were doing to the Jews. When they found the extermination camps of course all countries were completely shocked. Even many of the German population had no idea of the extermination camps (that's how well hidden and kept Hitler had made them) and American soldiers would take Germans into the camps to show them the extent of what Adolf Hitler, their leader, had done.
Only Nazi Germany and some its Axis allies (Croatia and Romania) committed the terrible atrocities that went to making the Holocaust in WW2.
No countries that went to war did so because of Nazi race policy. All the countries that fought against the Axis did so because of the desire of the Axis countries to attack neutral neighbouring countries & territories of other countries empires. All the countries that fought against Nazi Germany were against the Holocaust but none went to war specifically because of it, indeed most were wholly unaware of it & its implications.
In the vast majority of countries, including the US and UK, there is no law against Holocaust denial. In Germany, Austria and some other countries, public denial of the Holocaust is banned on the grounds that it is tantamount to an attempt to rehabilitate the Nazis (with a view to restoring them) and on the grounds that it is a form of Jew-baiting. Please see the link.
most of Europe and to some degree many countries beyond.
what did people think of the holocaust that was reported during world war two?
Answer this question… They established a new category of crimes for actions similar to those of the Holocaust.
I only know a couple.Israel,Russia,Germany,North America.___All countries under Nazi rule. This did not include Israel or the US. The countries with the highest numbers of Holocaust victims were:Poland (about 2.9 million Jews)Hungary (about 450,000 Jews)
No.There is a lot of misunderstanding about laws against Holocaust denial. In countries that have such laws (for example, Germany) there is no requirement for "believing in the Holocaust". The prohibition or ban is on publicly denying it. The laws do not say "Thou shalt believe in the Holocaust".Nevertheless, this is a restriction on freedom of speech ...Incidentally, contrary to a widespread misconception, Britain has no law against Holocaust denial.
Germany is the country that made the holocaust
In the vast majority of countries, including the US and UK, there is no law against Holocaust denial. In Germany, Austria and some other countries, public denial of the Holocaust is banned on the grounds that it is tantamount to an attempt to rehabilitate the Nazis (with a view to restoring them) and on the grounds that it is a form of Jew-baiting. Please see the link.
The question suggests that many countries in some sense "intervened" [to stop] the Holocaust, but that a few didn't do so. In fact, no country "intervened" in order to stop the Holocaust. No country went to war against Nazi Germany because of the Holocaust. (Israel didn't exist as a clearly defined or independent country at the time). Politics doesn't work like that. In fact most countries that fought against Germany did so because they were attacked by Germany or one of its allies.
the jewish community was spread out across many different countries
There is no rational justification for Holocaust denial.
Untied States was one of the many countries whom at at first did not help during the holocaust
presumably you mean by the Catholics against the Jews; it was called the Holocaust. Though what happened in Yugoslavia was independent of the Holocaust, the victims are counted in with the victims of the Holocaust.
the Holocaust had no 'the Allies' per se, there were alliances like between the escape committees inside camps and the local resistance groups.
Yes
The equivalence of the Holocaust in today's society is that their are still little mini holocaust but they're mostly known as silent holocausts, which is in countries like Iraq and Israel, so middle eastern countries
holocaust