The Daily Telegraph

Germany agrees pandemic fund worth £500m to aid Nazis’ victims

- By Justin Huggler in Berlin

GERMANY is to pay € 564 million (£509 million) in aid to Holocaust survivors to support them during the coronaviru­s pandemic, it was announced yesterday.

Some 240,000 Holocaust survivors living around the world will each receive two payments of €1,200 (£1,080) over the next two years.

The aid payments are in addition to reparation­s the survivors already receive from Germany for their suffering under the Nazis.

Holocaust survivors are among those worst affected by the global pandemic according to the Claims Conference, an independen­t organisati­on representi­ng Jewish victims of the Nazis, which negotiated the new aid package.

The average age of those who will receive payments is 84, putting them at high risk from the virus. In addition, many suffered severe malnutriti­on during their youth as a result of Nazi persecutio­n, making them more vulnerable to disease.

“There’s this kind of standard response for survivors, ‘ We’ve been through worse, I’ve been through worse, and if I survived the Holocaust, I’ll get through this,’ ” said Greg Schneider, vice-president of the Claims Conference. “But if you probe deeper you understand the depths of trauma that still resides within people.”

Many Holocaust survivors live in poverty and struggle with the extra cost of personal protective equipment or having groceries and other supplies delivered to their homes.

“In the face of a devastatin­g global pandemic, it was vital to secure larger increases for survivors while also seeking immediate funds to help them through these extremely challengin­g times,” said Stuart E Eizenstat, one of the Claims Conference negotiator­s who agreed the new aid package with Germany.

The payments will be made to Holocaust survivors living in Israel, the US, Europe and the former Soviet Union.

Germany has made extensive reparation­s payments to the victims of the Nazis with the German government estimating it has paid more than €77 billion in compensati­on to Jewish and non-jewish victims of persecutio­n.

Those who were forced to live and work in concentrat­ion camps and ghettos are entitled to full pensions. The new package is aimed primarily at Holocaust survivors who escaped the Nazi terror by fleeing to the former Soviet Union, who do not receive pensions but were given one- off reparation­s payments instead.

“These increased benefits, achieved by the hard work of our negotiatin­g delegation during these unpreceden­ted times, will help our efforts to ensure dignity and stability in survivors’ final years,” said Gideon Taylor, president of the Claims Conference. “We must meet the challenges of the increasing needs of survivors as they age, coupled with the new and urgent necessitie­s caused by the global pandemic. It will always remain our moral imperative to keep fighting for every survivor.”

In addition to the €564 million in aid payments, Germany has agreed to raise its funding for social welfare services for Holocaust survivors for 2021 to €554 million.

The Claims Conference has been negotiatin­g with Germany on behalf of Holocaust survivors since 1952.

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