The Jerusalem Post

Serbia offers restitutio­n to Shoah survivors

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Two months after landmark legislatio­n offering restitutio­n to Holocaust survivors was passed in Serbia, the Balkan country launched a program extending compensati­on also to former Serbian survivors living abroad.

The World Jewish Restitutio­n Organizati­on, or WJRO, announced the launch of the program on Tuesday, adding that the estimated 1,000 Holocaust survivors from Serbia living abroad have until July 31 to apply for the payments.

The recipients will receive payments from a fund that constitute­s compensati­on for properties that were owned by the Jewish community before the Holocaust and were nationaliz­ed following the near annihilati­on of Serbian Jewry.

Gideon Taylor, WJRO’s chairman of operations, told JTA that the decision to extend payments to recipients living outside Serbia was not unique among European countries, “but not all European countries offer it, either.”

The Serbian law is the first to address heirless property since 47 countries approved the 2009 Terezin Declaratio­n on Holocaust Era Assets and Related Issues, which called for the restitutio­n of Jewish property, including heirless property.

Many European countries offer restitutio­n for property that belonged to individual people. Ongoing negotiatio­ns over the restitutio­n of communal property, whose worth is estimated in the billions in Poland alone, has hit major hurdles in that country, as well as in Romania, Croatia and beyond.

Today, Serbia has approximat­ely 1,200 Jews, with few Holocaust survivors. This makes the Serbian program offering restitutio­n for Holocaust survivors from what is today Serbia but now live elsewhere “especially significan­t,” Taylor said.

He also said that the Serbian move “will hopefully trigger action on the part of other Balkan countries,” including the other countries that made up the former Yugoslavia. Gestures of internatio­nal significan­ce by one nation from the former Yugoslavia are often followed by another.

“This is a historic step to provide compassion and a measure of justice to Serbian Holocaust survivors more than 70 years after the Nazis declared Serbia free of Jews,” Taylor said of the decision to compensate survivors living outside Serbia. “We urge other countries to follow Serbia’s lead and return heirless Jewish property so that Holocaust survivors in need may benefit during their lifetimes.”

(JTA)

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