Las Vegas Review-Journal

Funds for Holocaust survivors

$4.3M aimed at helping amid outbreak, available worldwide

- By David Rising The Associated Press

BERLIN — Millions of dollars in additional funding is being made available to agencies around the world that provide aid to Holocaust survivors, whose advanced age and health issues makes them particular­ly vulnerable to the new coronaviru­s, the organizati­on that handles claims on behalf of Jewish victims of the Nazis announced Monday.

The New York-based Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany said Monday that the

$4.3 million in initial funding would be made available to agencies around the world providing care for some 120,000 survivors.

The emergency funding includes $215,000 from the Alfred Landecker Foundation, establishe­d last year by one of Germany’s richest families, whose assets include Krispy Kreme Doughnuts, as a way to help atone for its use of forced laborers during the Nazi era and support of Adolf Hitler’s regime.

All survivors are elderly, with the end of World War II now 75 years in the past, and many suffered from illness, malnutriti­on and other deprivatio­ns either at the hands of the Nazis or as they hid from them, which continues to affect their health.

There are no statistics yet as to how many Holocaust survivors have been infected by the new coronaviru­s, but Israel’s first reported COVID-19 fatality was 88-year-old survivor Aryeh Even, and about one-third of the elderly population in Israel consists of survivors, according to the Claims Conference.

“The coronaviru­s pandemic is a frightenin­g time for Holocaust survivors as this is a population, like many elderly, that already tends to experience too much social isolation,” said Claims Conference President Julius Berman. “The social isolation caused by this health crisis can take a serious emotional toll which, if unchecked can lead to physical ailments.”

The additional funds will be used to “address critical gaps” in providing survivors help with home care, food, medicine and other assistance as it is needed.

It is in addition to approximat­ely $350 million in direct compensati­on the Claims Conference is providing to more than 60,000 survivors in 83 countries this year, and some $610 million in grants to more than 300 social service agencies.

The Claims Conference is also providing advances of previously committed funds and taking other steps to help the agencies that support survivors.

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