"In countries just emerging from dictatorships, societies have
been looking to history for models of reparations and justice for
the victims. German reparations for the victims of Nazism
represents both a model and a warning."--from the Preface
In the aftermath of World War II, a defeated Nazi Germany hoped
to ignore concentration camp survivors. But the Western Allies, the
newly established Israeli government, and the Conference on Jewish
Material Claims against Germany defended the rights of Jews who had
survived the Holocaust and of the relatives of those who had been
murdered. International treaties enacted by these groups forced the
Federal Republic of Germany to financially compensate the victims
for stolen property as well as for damage to physical and mental
health and livelihood.
In "Paying for the Past, " physician and historian Christian
Pross untangles the complicated history of reparations in West
Germany, from the American military government's 1947 Law Number 59
(Restitution of Property Stolen in the Course of the "Aryanization
of the Economy") to West Germany's Federal Restitution Law of 1957
and into the 1970s. When first published in German in 1988, Pross's
landmark research caused a furor because it exposed the hostility
of the West German people and the bitter political opposition
within the government toward reparations legislation and the
Holocaust victims seeking restitution. One of Pross's most
disturbing discoveries was that victims were frequently
retraumatized by the reparations process itself. Some were forced
to undergo medical and psychological examination by dozens of
physicians in order to substantiate their claims of abuse. Many
more had claims still pending after twenty years of waiting.
"Paying for the Past" uncovers the inconsistencies,
distortions, superficialities, and veiled anti-Semitic attitudes of
West Germany's official version of its reparations history. Pross
brings to light the government's continuous resistance to
reparations and allows those who challenged this official
reluctance to finally speak. Through victims' statements and
numerous eyewitness accounts, the book also unblinkingly documents
the crimes for which victims demanded restitution. Finally
available in English, this edition of "Paying for the Past"
contains a new preface by the author and an afterword by medical
ethicist Erich Loewy which places the ethical issues raised by the
West German experiences with reparations into an international
context.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!