Germany Urged to Resolve Greek Holocaust Ransom Issue
Error: Contact form not found.
by JNS.org

More than 50,000 Jews in Thessaloniki, Greece were killed during the Holocaust. Photo: German Federal Archives via Wikimedia Commons.
JNS.org – The World Jewish Congress urged Germany to address a request by the Greek Jewish community of Thessaloniki to be paid back for a ransom it had surrendered to the Nazis when they occupied Greece during the Second World War.
In 1942, the Greek Jewish community paid 2.5 million drachmas (about $69 million currently) to a Nazi commander for the release of about 10,000 Jews who were forced to perform hard labor on roads and railroads. About 50,000 Thessaloniki Jews were killed during the Holocaust.
The Jewish community of Thessaloniki first brought the request to return the money before Greek courts in 2007. This year, the Jewish community is suing Germany over the issue in the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, although Germany’s Finance Ministry has so far rejected the request.
“Surely the German government, which has settled so many Holocaust-era claims righteously, can find a resolution for this claim, which the Jewish community of Thessaloniki in Greece has pressed for decades and is extensively documented,” World Jewish Congress President Ronald S. Lauder said Tuesday. “As German President Joachim Gauck makes an official visit to Greece this week, now is the time to bring closure to this episode.”
Trump Says US May Strike Iran Again but That Tehran Wants Deal
Somaliland Says It Will Open an Embassy in Jerusalem, Israel to Reciprocate
Lebanese People Broadly Support Hezbollah’s Disarmament, Peace With Israel, New Poll Finds
Antisemitic AI Videos Target Children With Disney-Pixar Style to Push Holocaust Denial, Report Shows
Yeshiva University Holds Conference Calling for ‘Social Science’ Study of Rising Antisemitism
Thomas Massie, Leading Anti-Israel Republican, Faces Trump-Backed Challenger on Primary Day in Kentucky
Hungarian Filmmaker Says ‘Orgy of Antisemitism Overtaking the West,’ Feels ‘Ostracized’ by Film Industry
UN Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese Urges Germany to Get Over Holocaust Guilt in Antisemitic Tirade
Kuwaiti Jiu-Jitsu Gold Medalist Refuses Handshake With Israeli Athlete: ‘We Do Not Respect Them At All’
When ‘International’ Law Is Used to Target Only Israel





At California Universities, Students Rally to Support Terrorists and Criticize Victims
How the Jewish People Can Unite: A Lesson From Yavne and the Mishnah
When ‘International’ Law Is Used to Target Only Israel
How Israel Adds Economic Value and Technological Advancement to the United States
UN Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese Urges Germany to Get Over Holocaust Guilt in Antisemitic Tirade



