The Herald

Germany to pay evacuated Jews

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GERMANY has agreed to payments for survivors, primarily Jews, who were evacuated from Nazi Germany as children.

The New York-based Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany said the government had agreed to payments of

€2,500 (£2,250) to those still alive from among the 10,000 people who fled on the so-called Kindertran­sport. This year is the

80th anniversar­y of beginning of the transport of the children to Britain from Nazi Germany and elsewhere in Europe.

About 1,000 survivors are thought to be alive today, with about half living in Britain, and the payment is seen as a “symbolic recognitio­n of their suffering,” said Claims Conference negotiator Greg Schneider.

“In almost all the cases the parents who remained were killed in concentrat­ion camps in the Holocaust and they have tremendous psychologi­cal issues,” Mr Schneider said.

Following the Nazis’ anti-jewish pogrom in November 1938 known as Kristallna­cht, or the Night Of Broken Glass, the British government agreed to allow an unspecifie­d number of Jewish children as refugees from Nazi

Germany or territorie­s it had annexed.

Jewish groups inside Nazi Germany planned the transport, and the first party arrived in Harwich on December 2, 1938, according to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.

The last transport from Germany left on September 1, 1939 – the day the Second World War broke out with the Nazi invasion of Poland – and the final transport from continenta­l Europe left the Netherland­s on May 14, 1940, the same day Dutch forces surrendere­d to the Nazis.

In all, about 10,000 children from Germany, Austria, Czechoslov­akia and Poland were taken to Britain, about 7,500 of whom were Jewish, according to the museum. About half were placed with foster families, while the others stayed in hostels, schools or farms.

In addition to those who remained in Britain, many resettled in the US,

Israel, Canada, Australia and elsewhere, Mr Schneider said.

Today, survivors are at least in their 80s and most continue to look back on their escape as the defining moment of their lives as they were put alone on to trains into the unknown, saying goodbye to parents and siblings often for the last time, he said.

“This money is acknowledg­ement this was a traumatic, horrible thing that happened to them.”

Some survivors already received small payments in the 1950s but that will not bar them from receiving the new benefit, the Claims Conference said.

The Claims Conference carries out continuous negotiatio­ns with Germany to expand the number of people eligible for compensati­on.

Since 1952, the German government has paid more than £63.5 billion to individual­s for suffering and losses resulting from persecutio­n by the Nazis.

 ??  ?? „ Tributes were left at a memorial to the Kindertran­sport in central Berlin.
„ Tributes were left at a memorial to the Kindertran­sport in central Berlin.

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