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Rabbi
Israel Miller (z''l) signs a special parchment during the
groundbreaking ceremonies for the new Historical
Museum in May 2000 Yad Vashem mourns the recent
passing of Rabbi Miller. |
This
year marks the 50th anniversary of the Conference
on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, founded by
representatives of 23 national and international Jewish
organizations in New York.
On
3 October 1951, former co-chairman of the Jewish Agency and
President of the World Jewish Congress, Dr. Nahum Goldmann
(z’’l)
, announced the establishment of a conference of Jewish
organizations to discuss claims resulting from the persecution
of the Jews by Nazi Germany. With the formation of the Claims
Conference Goldmann assumed the role of
President, and Saul Kagan, who today serves as Special
Consultant, became Executive Secretary.
At
the time of its inception the two main aims of the Claims
Conference were: “to obtain funds for the relief,
rehabilitation, and resettlement of Jewish victims of Nazi
persecution, and to aid in rebuilding Jewish communities and
institutions that were devastated by the Nazis,” and “to
gain indemnification for injuries inflicted on individual
victims of Nazi persecution and restitution for properties
confiscated by the Nazis.”
Although
its original mandate was to negotiate with the German
government, in 1953 the Claims Conference formed the Committee
for Jewish Claims on Austria to obtain compensation for Nazi
victims from the Austrian government. Throughout the years,
the Claims Conference has also pursued compensation for Jewish
slave laborers.
Since
its establishment, the Claims Conference has negotiated some
24 separate agreements with the German and Austrian
governments and industry, which have resulted in the
compensation for over 500,000 Holocaust survivors. Around
200,000 survivors are now receiving payments through programs
negotiated by the Claims Conference—some of which are
directly administered by the Claims Conference. Some 40,000
survivors in Israel receive pensions from the Israeli Ministry
of Finance. The Claims Conference’s Representative in Israel
is Avraham Pressler.
The
successes of the Claims Conference—currently headed by its
President since 1982, Rabbi Dr. Israel Miller, and its
Executive Vice President since 1999, Gideon Taylor—have
resulted in compensation of more than 100 billion Deutschmarks
for Jewish victims of Nazi persecution. Eighty percent of its
funds are allocated to organizations assisting survivors, and
the remainder towards Holocaust education, research, and
documentation.
The
establishment of Yad Vashem was one of the first major
contributions made by the Claims Conference in Israel. In 1953
it provided half of Yad Vashem’s funding, and was the
decisive factor in the establishment of Yad Vashem’s first
building in 1957. The Claims Conference has pledged to raise a
third of the total cost of Yad Vashem’s multi-year
development project, the “Yad
Vashem 2001” masterplan, and within this framework is
the main donor of Yad Vashem’s
Archives and Library Building. A strategic partner, the
Claims Conference has continued to fund Yad Vashem’s
research, documentation, and education programs, thereby
placing Yad Vashem as the Claims Conference’s single largest
recipient.
The
Claims Conference—which has supported and promoted Yad
Vashem as the pioneer and leading center for Holocaust
commemoration and documentation—will be honored at a jubilee
event at the end of November. The event is being organized
jointly by Yad Vashem, and three additional Israeli recipients
of Claims Conference funding: the Ghetto Fighters’
House-Holocaust and Jewish Resistance Heritage Museum, Massua
– The Institute for the Study of the Holocaust, and
Moreshet-Mordechai Anilevich Memorial Study Center for
Teaching the Holocaust.
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