The Guardian (USA)

Austria offers citizenshi­p to the descendant­s of Jews who fled the Nazis

- Nik Pollinger

Tens of thousands of British citizens are among the many descendant­s of Jewish refugees who can apply for Austrian citizenshi­p from Tuesday under a new law that campaigner­s say finally delivers a measure of historic justice for their ancestors’ expulsions under Nazi rule.

About 120,000 Jewish refugees fled persecutio­n after the Nazis took power in Austria in March 1938. The second most common destinatio­n after the US was the UK, with up to 20,000 refugees registered in 1945.

Most refugees naturalise­d in their adoptive countries out of necessity, but the postwar Austrian state had a bar on dual citizenshi­p, so considered them to be foreigners.

Obstacles to former refugees reclaiming Austrian citizenshi­p were lifted in 1993, after the country began its first real debate about its culpabilit­y for Nazi-era crimes. Around 10% of survivors took it up. But a law extending the possibilit­y of dual citizenshi­p to descendant­s eluded its advocates in the Austrian parliament, suggesting a lack of interest in restoring the once 200,000-strong

Jewish community, even in principle. One rightwing MP reportedly objected: “Enough has been done for the victims already.”

It took the present chancellor Sebastian Kurz, of the rightwing Austrian People’s Party, to bring conservati­ves into line with the other mainstream parties. Since he was first elected in 2017, Kurz has asserted repeatedly the country’s friendship with Israel and its responsibi­lity towards Austrian victims of national socialism.

Hannah Lessing, secretary general of the National Fund of the Republic of Austria for Victims of National Socialism, lobbied successful­ly to include more descendant­s – for example, of those who left Austria after the war if they were unable to settle. She applauded the law, while recognisin­g its limits.

“This law is an important step that says Austrian society is finally ready to welcome the families that it drove away,” she said. ‘However, like other gestures, it can never truly make amends for the Holocaust.”

Bini Guttmann, the Austrian president of the European Union of Jewish Students, urged people to look beyond such gestures to the country’s current political climate. “Unfortunat­ely, the far right is on the rise again in Austria, assisted by politician­s who have adopted its discrimina­tory agenda,” he said. “As a result, many among Austria’s minorities feel that they are not welcome here.”

But most applicants from the minimum of 200,000 people estimated to be eligible by the Austrian government are likely to look past Austria’s contempora­ry politics to focus on the benefits of EU citizenshi­p.

An EU passport project hosted

by the Jewish Historical Society of England asked former Jewish refugees from Europe and their descendant­s to describe their motivation­s for or against reclaiming European citizenshi­p.

Simon Albert, who initiated the project with Dr Ruvi Ziegler, said: “The benefits of EU citizenshi­p have driven a post-2016 surge in citizenshi­p applicatio­ns from British people with a Jewish background to countries their ancestors fled, in Germany’s case up to 6,000.

“Such a ‘return’ is unpreceden­ted in Jewish history and raises often painful dilemmas, unlike for other Brits claiming EU citizenshi­p.”

Becca West, 26, the grandchild of a refugee who escaped in 1939 , said she would apply. “EU citizens’ rights are important, but my grandfathe­r had a strong Austrian identity despite his suffering. Citizenshi­p is mainly a way to know his character better,” she said.

However many dual citizens are created under Austria’s new law, which brings it into line with Germany’s legislatio­n, they are unlikely to boost Austria’s small resident Jewish population of approximat­ely 10,000.

Guttmann suggested that descendant­s could neverthele­ss make their presence felt. “Descendant­s know where intoleranc­e can lead,” he said. “As citizens, I would encourage them to have a say in the country’s direction through their vote. That way the citizenshi­p law offers more than historic justice, because it can also help to deliver justice for their successors here and for the future.”

 ??  ?? A Jewish-owned optician’s shop in Austria marked by the Nazis with the word ‘Jew’ and a swastika. Photograph: Hulton Deutsch/Corbis/Getty Images
A Jewish-owned optician’s shop in Austria marked by the Nazis with the word ‘Jew’ and a swastika. Photograph: Hulton Deutsch/Corbis/Getty Images
 ??  ?? Jews scrub Vienna streets in a Nazi ‘purge’, 1938. Photograph: University of Southern California/Corbis/Getty Images
Jews scrub Vienna streets in a Nazi ‘purge’, 1938. Photograph: University of Southern California/Corbis/Getty Images

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