Wednesday, May 1, 2019

HOLOCAUST SURVIVORS TELL STORIES OF STOLEN PROPERTY ON SOCIAL MEDIA

Using the #MyPropertyStory hashtag and and tagging @WJRORestitution, the WJRO and individuals who have heard about the campaign have posted dozens of such stories on the various social media networks

BY 
 
 MAY 1, 2019 20:43
 
4 minute read.


    Yoram Sztykgold was three years old when the Nazis invaded Poland in 1939.
    Yoram Sztykgold was three years old when the Nazis invaded Poland in 1939.. (photo credit: COURTESY WORLD JEWISH RESTITUTION ORGANIZATION)
    The World Jewish Restitution Organization has launched a social media campaign to encourage Holocaust survivors to tell their stories of what they endured under the Nazi regime and about the property that was stolen from them during the course of the 1930s and the Second World War.

    The WJRO asked Holocaust survivors, their children, grandchildren, extended families, and others to share and post their stories on  Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube about life before the Holocaust and to “shine a light on the injustice suffered by millions as a result of what was wrongfully taken from them during the Shoah and its aftermath.”
    Using the #MyPropertyStory hashtag and and tagging @WJRORestitution, the WJRO and individuals who have heard about the campaign have posted dozens of such stories on the various social media platforms.

    One account highlighted by WJRO is that of Holocaust survivor Lea Evron who recounts her young life in Poland in a video she made with the organization in which she described her father’s successful business, the family’s exile from Poland, and her lifelong battle for the return of the family’s property.

    Apart from Evron and her mother, the entire family was murdered in the Holocaust and she said that everything the family had owned was taken away.

    She recounts her return to Poland and a woman who told them bitterly that “Hitler promised them to kill all the Jews and here they are coming [back] again.”

    Said Evron “Since 1988, when Poland became a democratic country, I have been trying to recover my father’s factory and building.”



    “Although I have received numerous promises from Polish Presidents, until today these properties have not been returned. I will never give up.”

    Another account posted by David Kotek, the grandson of a Holocaust survivor, who heard about the WJRO campaign, described how his grandfather and his brothers who perished in the Holocaust had owned an apartment building in the Polish city of Sosnowiec, the address for which he gave as 12 Tsasne Street .

    Kotek wrote that the Sosnowiec municipality had nationalised the property despite a court ruling that his grandfather had been the true owner.

    In a case highlighted by the WJRO, Shosh Greenberg, the 71 year-old daughter of a Holocaust survivor from Lodz, Poland, has been fighting for restitution of family property in the city.

    The family had 7,000 square meters of commercial space in the city which was nationalized by the Municipality of Lodz after the war. In a lengthy legal process that lasted seven years, cost nearly NIS 200,000, a the court ruled in 2018 that Greenberg was the legal heir.

    According to Greenberg, the Land Registry Office in Lodz refused to register her as the legal owner, claiming that the last date in the law was to register as owner in 2008 and that due to nationalization, a warning notice was registered in the Land Registry, and that Greenberg can therefore not be registered as an owner.

    "My father swore me not to give up and fight to return the family's property. I testified before the court in Lodz, I felt that I was speaking from my father's throat and representing all the victims," she said.

    Yoram Sztykgold, who also made a video with WJRO, was three years old when the Nazis invaded Poland in 1939.



    He described his family who lived in Warsaw, Poland, as having been “very wealthy” before the Holocaust and had owned six or seven properties in the city.

    Sztykgold and his family were forced into the infamous Warsaw Ghetto but they managed to smuggle Yoram out. When he returned to the city he saw that most of the city, including his family’s property, had been destroyed.

    “What do I want from Poland? The Germans destroyed, and what remained the Poles nationalised. That which they nationalised I want them to return,” said Sztykgold.

    “My children, through me, suffered, they deserve this. Me? I am already 82, so peace be upon Israel.”

    According to WJRO, there are still some 400,000 Holocaust survivors alive around the world, but most have not received any restitution, compensation or acknowledgment for the dispossession of their property.

    The organization said that the #MyPropertyStory social media campaign is designed to raise awareness amongst survivors and their families “to ensure that they see a measure of justice in their lifetime and help them secure what is rightfully theirs.”  

    WJRO Chair of Operations Gideon Taylor said that the #MyPropertyStory has given is a unique Holocaust survivors and their families a platform to “share their cherished memories of lives that were forever changed,” and draw awareness to the issue.

    “Behind every property there is a story. It is a link, a connection, a bond to the history of Jewish families and communities torn apart by the Holocaust.”
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    GREEK MAYOR TO VISIT GHETTO FIGHTERS HOLOCAUST MUSEUM

    Mayor Yiannis Boutaris of Thessaloniki is to pay tribute to the Greek Jews deported by the Nazis in World War II.

    BY BEN BRESKY
     
     MAY 1, 2019 17:14
     
    1 minute read.


      Members of a pioneer youth movement, shown in a Ghetto Fighter's House Musem exhibition.
      Members of a pioneer youth movement, shown in a Ghetto Fighter's House Musem exhibition.. (photo credit: COURTESY GHETTO FIGHTERS' HOUSE MUSEUM ARCHIVES)
      Yiannis Boutaris, mayor of Thessaloniki, Greece is scheduled to visit the Ghetto Fighters' House museum in kibbutz Lohamei HaGeta'ot for Yom HaShoah.
      Greek Jews who lived in Thessaloniki were deported to death camps when the Nazis invaded. Boutaris is seeking to strengthen ties with Israel and the Jewish world, and the city is in the process of building a Holocaust museum.
      The museum is to be built near the old railway station from which the Jews were deported to camps in Auschwitz and other places. Histrionically, Thessaloniki prided itself on its multiculturalism, being home to Jews, Christians and Muslims for generations. Only about 4% of the city's Jewish community, mostly of Sephardic origin, survived World War II.


      The Ghetto Fighters' House will host closing ceremonies for the Yom HaShoah - Holocaust and Heroism Remembrance Day on Thursday. Both the museum and kibbutz, located in northern Israel, were founded in 1949 by Holocaust survivors, particularly those that fought in the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. Yom HaShoah's date was chosen to commemorate the dramatic resistance in the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising against the Nazi regime.

      The museum, along with the Chamber of the Holocaust on Jerusalem's Mount Zion were founded about a year after Israel became independent from the British and pre-date the Yad Vashem national Holocaust center.


      Those who will be honored with lighting the six memorial torches will be Tunisian-born Shlomo Richard Almog who survived a forced labor camp when the Nazis invaded North Africa, Slovenian-born Avery Fisher and Shimon Almog Huter both of whom lived with Catholic families under assumed identities, Wolf & Shlomo Galperin, leaders of the "131 Kovno Children" group, Hungarian-born Esther Cohen who survived the Mauthausen death camp, and Prof. Yoram Harpaz, the son of Holocaust survivors and author of a book about "second generation" children.

      Israeli singer Nathan Goshen will perform at the ceremony in the presence of IDF Commander of the Northern Command, Major General Amir Baram and others.

      The museum will be free and open to the public throughout the day.

      Learn about the March of the Living.
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