The Jerusalem Post

Holocaust survivors group slams ‘pitiful results’ obtained by Claims Conference

Compensati­on falls far short of basic needs, says US-based organizati­on

- • By TAMARA ZIEVE

Holocaust Survivors Foundation USA released a withering statement on Thursday, slamming the outcome of negotiatio­ns between the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany and the German government.

The main announceme­nt highlighte­d by the Claims Conference on Wednesday was that Holocaust survivors of the death trains, pogroms and ghettos in Iasi, Romania, will for the first time be eligible to receive compensati­on pensions. It also announced an increase in the in-home services budget for 2018, from $399 million to $462m.

But the Foundation, which is often critical of both the Claims Conference and the compensati­on process in general said: “Once again, the Claims Conference announceme­nt of their so-called negotiatio­ns will mean little to thousands of survivors in dire need of serious health care, mental health care and all the rest of the services they currently are deprived of for lack of resources that Germany should have provided to so many deserving of help.”

The foundation represents Holocaust survivors in the US, fighting for their rights and raising awareness about the hardships and poverty they face.

While welcoming the “long overdue” announceme­nt regarding the victims of the Iasi massacres, the group said that it “cannot be used to obscure the broader failure of the negotiatio­ns – once again.”

According to the foundation, $462m. allocated to in-home services is “tragically low when compared with survivors’ real-life needs, and when spread across the 67,000 survivors worldwide the Claims Conference said it served last year.”

It highlighte­d that funds for emergency services “are desperatel­y and widely needed by Holocaust survivors and obscenely underfunde­d.”

Since 1952, the Claims Conference has negotiated for compensati­on and restitutio­n for victims of Nazi persecutio­n and their heirs. The organizati­on administer­s compensati­on funds, recovers unclaimed Jewish property, and allocates funds to institutio­ns that provide social welfare services to Holocaust survivors and preserve the memory and lessons of the Holocaust.

There are an estimated 500,000 Holocaust victims alive today. Approximat­ely 20% of them live in the US.

Holocaust Survivors Foundation USA maintains the Claims Conference’s role as an intermedia­ry between Germany and the survivors is unnecessar­y. “It is time to end the piecemeal, secret negotiatio­ns that have failed to alleviate the poverty and suffering of so many survivors,” it argues. “Survivors need and deserve a comprehens­ive program of care fully funded by Germany for a new life, worry free for the last part of their lives. These funds should be channeled to the survivors through the US government or directly to survivors.”

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