Germany will pay Holocaust survivors across the world over $1 billion in 2024

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Germany will pay Holocaust survivors across the world over $1 billion in 2024

Germany will pay Holocaust survivors over $1.4 billion next year, which will go toward one-time payments for the survivors and welfare programs.

The Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany announced the compensations on Tuesday in a press release after meeting with the German Federal Ministry of Finance. The conference, which represents Holocaust survivors, stated the $1.4 billion will go towards direct compensation and social welfare programs for the survivors.

$888.9 million total in funding will go toward home care services with an additional $105.2 million going toward survivors; "increased" needs

A one-time payment each year until 2027 toward more then 128,000 recipients of the Hardship Fund. Survivors will receive €1,250 ($1,365.88 in U.S. currency) per person for 2024, €1,300 ($1,420.51 in U.S. currency) for 2025, €1,350 ($1,475.14 in U.S. currency) for 2026 and €1,400 ($1,529.78 in U.S. currency) for 2027.

Germany also extended funding for Holocaust education until 2027. There will be €38 million ($41.52 million in U.S. currency) toward education in 2026 and €41 million ($44.80 million in U.S. currency) toward education in 2027.

Overall, the total amount of compensation for Holocaust survivors for 2024 is expected to be around $535 million.

Greg Schneider, executive vice president of the Claims Conference, said in the release that the negotiations are essential to supporting Holocaust survivors who are elderly.

"Being able to ensure direct payments to survivors in addition to the expansions to the social welfare services we are able to fund is essential in making sure every Holocaust survivor is taken care of for as long as it is required, addressing each individual need,” he said.

What is the Hardship Fund payment?

The Hardship Fund was first created to be a one-time payment to Holocaust survivors. During COVID-19, however, negotiations led to three more supplemental payments to those who are eligible, spurring the continuation of the fund until December 2023. Germany agreed to extend the payment again, which will wrap up in 2027 now.

Those eligible for the payment include Jewish people who were from the former Soviet Union but were not placed in camps or ghettos. Those receiving payment also have to not be eligible for pension programs.

"These survivors fled the Einsatzgruppen—Nazi mobile killing units charged with murdering entire Jewish communities. More than 1 million Jews were killed by these units, which operated largely by shooting hundreds and thousands of Jews at a time and burying them in mass pits," the press release stated.

The release states that this group of survivors are some that need the most help as they age.

"By expanding payments to these survivors, the German government is acknowledging that this suffering is still being felt deeply, both emotionally and financially. While symbolic, these payments provide financial relief for many aging Jewish Holocaust survivors living around the world," it states.

More: WWII re-enactments draw dozens in Nazi uniforms — and one Jewish educator working to make sure the Holocaust is remembered

What will the home care services entail?

The Claims Conference has over 300 social welfare agency partners in 83 countries that provide home care services. The agencies deliver in-home services, where they work directly with survivors to make sure they have everything they need, whether its food, health care, transportation, or being social.

"These are all critically important to this last generation of Holocaust survivors who are finding their needs more costly in their waning years," the release states,

Stuart Eizenstat, special negotiator for the Claims Conference Negotiations Delegation, said in the release that he is inspired by Germany's responsibility to the survivors in continuing to provide them with care.

"It has been nearly 80 years since the liberation of Auschwitz and the need to negotiate for survivor care and compensation is more urgent than ever. Every negotiation is a near-last opportunity to ensure survivors of the Holocaust are receiving some measure of justice and a chance at the dignity that was taken from them in their youth. It will never be enough until the last survivor has taken their last breath,” Eizenstat said.

The release states that it is important that Holocaust survivors share their stories and are remembered as they grow older.

"It is essential that survivors know their legacy will be carried forward by the generations that come behind them," it states. "To this end, the German government and Claims Conference have been in long-term discussions to ensure that the lessons of the Holocaust will not be lost as we transition from first-hand memories and lived experiences into history."

A Claims Conference survey found that knowledge about the Holocaust is declining in multiple countries across the world, including the U.S., Canada, Austria, France, the U.K. and The Netherlands. However, the study also shows that people want to continue to learn about the Holocaust so an event like it does not occur again, the release says.

"One of the goals from the ongoing negotiations with the German government is to improve funding for education programs that will ensure future generations have access to cutting-edge, innovative Holocaust education programs," it states.

More: DeSantis vs the Nazis: When has Florida's governor spoken out against antisemitism?

Kate Perez covers breaking and trending news for USA TODAY. You can reach her at [email protected] or on Twitter @katecperez_.

ChossMonkey on June 20th, 2023 at 03:00 UTC »

My grandfather is Polish-Ukrainian. Born 1928, lived through the Holodomor, Nazi invasion, at 13 became a slave railroad builder for the Nazis in Austria.

When the war ended he went home to find the village razed and people displaced, he tried to stay but Soviet oppression was in full force. Assuming his family had perished he boarded a ship in Italy in '47 and came to Canada.

Growing up he never talked about the old country, if asked he would say the past is behind him.

In the late 80's he receives a Red Cross letter that his sister was looking for his whereabouts (assuming he had died).

He traveled back to Ukraine in the early 90's to visit his sister. Turns out his 3 brothers and even his mother were still alive. With extended family of about 30 great grandchildren which were unknown to him at the time.

Incredible to live half a world away and think your alone.

LinaFinsterwald on June 19th, 2023 at 20:10 UTC »

This thread is a shithole. Despite the protests, the agreement was signed in September 1952, and West Germany paid Israel a sum of 3 billion marks (around 714 million USD according to 1953-1955 conversion rates[14]) over the next fourteen years; 450 million marks were paid to the World Jewish Congress. The 1 billion will be part OF EIGHTY BILLION EUROS - what is that I heard about it being "just one billion, barely anything when split up among the recipients? The German government is putting forward legislation to compensate men convicted under the country's infamous Paragraph 175 of the criminal code, which made male homosexuality a punishable offense and which was only completely repealed in 1994. Those convicted faced lengthy jail sentences and life-long social stigma. GERMANY TO PAY $1 BILLION IN REPARATIONS TO AFRICAN COUNTRY The German government has pledged to replace the Transsexuellengesetz with the Selbstbestimmungsgesetz, which would remove the financial and bureaucratic hurdles necessary for legal gender and name changes.[ In 1975, the Gierek-Schmidt agreement was signed in Warsaw. It stipulated that 1.3 billion DM was to be paid to Poles who, during Nazi occupation, had paid into the German social security system but received no pension. There were reparations to Poland, Greece, Israel, The Netherlands, Yugoslavia and the SU. (can't do the direct link thing for some reason, sorry) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_War_II_reparations#:~:text=In%201975%2C%20the%20Gierek%2DSchmidt,system%20but%20received%20no%20pension. Here you can learn about how every high school student knows about WW2 and the holocaust. This is the concentration camp our class visited for history class. It is preserved and entails dozens of info boards, an audio guide and does tours. School class visits are frequent.

This is not the "least we can do" - it's a tiny TINY part of billions of euros and back then, marks. It is a tiny bit of political engagement, of drawing attention to the shit that happened and making sure everyone knows how and why it happened. This is part of 70 years of engagement, apologies, awareness and generational guilt of all forms you will ever think of. If anyone knows how much has happened and that those lives and homes can never be weighed up with money, it's us. And if anyone has ever done more than anyone else to stand up for their country's actions...

It's us.

Don't spread lies about us not doing x or y. Don't pretend this is all we ever did. Don't pretend we aren't doing anything we physically can to try and salvage the horrors of the Second World War. It's terrifying to see so much fucking ignorance in this thread just spouted about with full confidence.

caveman1337 on June 19th, 2023 at 13:34 UTC »

Wow, $1 billion is a lot. How many people are even still alive to split that, especially since it occured about 80 years ago?