BERLIN (Reuters) - Germany's Labour Ministry is to bring in new legislation extending the pension rights of thousands of Jews forced to work in Nazi-era ghettos, Spiegel magazine reported on Sunday.
Following negotiations with the Claims Conference, Germany has agreed to loosen the criteria for payment to certain survivors of ghettos. Under the new rules, which go into effect Jan. 1, any Jew who ...
More than 1,000 people have applied for new compensation money from Germany for labor performed in Amsterdam’s Jewish ghetto during the Holocaust. The compensation offers a one-time payment of $2,700 ...
Germany’s Labour Ministry is to bring in new legislation extending the pension rights of thousands of Jews forced to work in Nazi-era ghettos, Spiegel magazine reported on Sunday. Spiegel said the ...
BERLIN (JTA) — Germany approved retroactive pension payments, going back to 1997, to Holocaust survivors who worked in Nazi ghettos. The Federal Cabinet announced the change to the ghetto pension law ...
WARSAW — Presidents joined Holocaust survivors and their descendants to commemorate the 80th anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising on Wednesday with a poignant sense that the responsibility for ...
The following article was published in the Baltimore Sun on May 18, 1934. Its author is anonymous. He is a special correspondent for The Sun and is spending his time in general study of conditions.
The German president has asked for forgiveness for the crimes his country committed during World War II, at a ceremony to mark the 80th anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. German President ...
Germany's main Jewish body is calling on the German government and parliament to step in on behalf of survivors of World War II ghettoes who have not yet received a German pension for their work.
Thirteen years ago, researchers at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum began the grim task of documenting all the ghettos, slave labor sites, concentration camps and killing factories that the ...