Algerian Jewish Holocaust Survivors Now Eligible For Compensation

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Paris, France – More than 25,000 Algerian Jews who survived the Holocaust may now be eligible for the first time for compensation from the German government, according to the Conference on Material Claims Against Germany (Claims Conference).

Jews who resided in Algeria between July 1940 and November 1942, and suffered from Nazi persecution, may now be eligible for payment through the Claims Conference Hardship Fund. Those eligible will be entitled to a one-time payment of the equivalent of about $3,100.

“This is a long overdue recognition for a large group of Jews in Algeria who suffered anti-Jewish measures by Nazi allies like the Vichy Regime,” said Greg Schneider, executive vice president of the Claims Conference. “The Vichy government subjected these people to restrictions on education, political life, participation in civil society and employment, abolishing French citizenship and singling them out only because they were Jews.”

The Claims Conference is opening a Registration Help Center in Paris, where the largest group of Algerian survivors resides, to help survivors apply for the newly identified compensation. Registration Center visits will be by appointment only, services are free to all survivors, and no legal representation is required.

The Registration Center will open this month and is expected to stay open through April.  Satellite centers in other cities such as Marseille, Lyon and Toulouse will be opened throughout that time to assist survivors that may not be able to get to the registration center in Paris. A direct mail will be sent out to known Algerian survivors in other countries informing them of the changes in their eligibility. Payments to those determined to be eligible will start in July.

Those who wish to schedule an appointment at any of the Claims Conference Registration Help Centers can access the online scheduling tool at: http://www.fonds-ipa.fr

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