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Bonn Government Approves Draft Law on Reich Restitution Obligations

June 27, 1956
See Original Daily Bulletin From This Date
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The West German Cabinet approved and forwarded to Parliament for further action the draft of a law to take care of restitution obligations of the former German state.

Involved are a wide variety of claims–the one-billion mark fine imposed upon the Jews of Germany after the Paris assassination of German diplomat Ernst vom Rath by Hershel Grynszpan in November 1938; discriminatory taxes and levies of various kinds; real estate and houses taken over by the state; silver, gold, jewelry and art works that had to be delivered to municipal pawnshops, and furniture and personal effects seized and auctioned off.

In the Paris Conventions and in the Hague Agreement, the liability of the West German Government for all such claims was arbitrarily limited to $357,000,000. It is understood that the Jewish successor organizations for heirless property have been offered a lump sum payment of $18,000,000 for the restitution claims against the Reich that fall within their jurisdiction.

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