The Jewish Chronicle

Kinder compensati­on deal

- BY JC REPORTER

GERMANY WILL pay £2,250 to Kindertran­sport child survivors who were evacuated to Britain to escape the Nazis in central Europe.

The announceme­nt coincides with the 80th anniversar­y of the 1938 evacuation, when the UK accepted thousands of children after Kristalnac­ht as the situation for Jews in Germany, Austria and Czechoslov­akia reached crisis proportion­s.

The New York-based Conference on Jewish Material Claims said the German government had agreed to a oneoff payment of €2,500 (£2,250) to the survivors, most of whom never saw their parents again.

Railway platforms became the scene of heart-breaking farewells as parents put infants into the care of their older children, which the Claims Conference said had scarred survivors for life. “After having to endure a life forever severed from their parents and families, no one can ever profess to make them whole; they are receiving a small measure of justice,” said negotiator Stuart Eizenstat.

The fund will begin processing applicatio­ns from January 1, 2019. Some survivors were provided a small payment in the 1950s but these will not bar claimants from receiving the new benefit.

Germany has made over €70 billion (£63 billion) in payments to individual­s for their losses and suffering during the Nazi era.

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