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It has been only recently that the long drawn out international
negotiations conducted in the U.S. on the subject of the
finalization of reparations to be paid by Germany to the, mainly
Jewish, forced laborers of the National Socialist regime were
concluded. The American-Jewish aspect of the broader subject of
involvement with the aftermath of the Holocaust has already evoked
an echo of wide-ranging discussions in the recently published works
of Wolf Calebow, Peter Novick and Norman Finkelstein. Siegfried
Moses, a German Jewish lawyer who had made his home in what was
then British Mandated Palestine, was already in the early 1940's
tentatively seeking the legal bases for reparation to be demanded
of Germany. He designed models for solutions to be applied, and by
doing so became one of the most important early thinkers on this
subject - a subject which was later codified in thousands of pages
of German legislation. Moses, whose main essay on future reparation
claims (originally published in German) has recently been reissued,
has influenced legal thinking up to the very recent past. This
essay, a document of contemporary history by any definition, is now
being made available to English readers, with introductions
covering the juridic as well as the bio-bibliographical aspects.
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