fbpx

Campaign seeks to locate heirs to Israeli assets

A campaign is being launched in North America to locate the heirs to Israeli assets originally purchased by Jews who died in the Holocaust.
[additional-authors]
April 13, 2010

A campaign is being launched in North America to locate the heirs to Israeli assets originally purchased by Jews who died in the Holocaust.

Throughout the first half of the 20th century, hundreds of European Jews invested in what was then Palestine. Following World War II, many of the assets were never claimed. Included in these assets are untouched plots of land, unclaimed bank accounts and shares from the Jewish Colonial Trust—the parent company of the Anglo Palestine Bank which later became Bank Leumi—as well as other Israeli financial institutions.

The Restitution of Holocaust Victims’ Assets, which is launching the campaign, has compiled lists of these assets and is working to make the process of returning the belongings to their beneficiaries as easy as possible. Ads calling on the heirs to come forward will run in Jewish newspapers in North America and on Jewish Web sites. It is believed that many of the investors or their descendants made their way to the United States following the war.

Set up by the State of Israel, the Restitution of Holocaust Victims’ Assets was established in 2006 to provide historical justice to the victims of the Holocaust and reinstate the assets with their legal heirs. Its establishment followed criticism of Israel for not doing enough to find the rightful heirs of Israeli assets. There are currently some 55,000 unclaimed assets on the organization’s list.

The organization’s Web site, Hashava.org.il, contains additional information on submitting an application to request restitution of an asset on the list.

Did you enjoy this article?
You'll love our roundtable.

Editor's Picks

Latest Articles

Reinventing Thanksgiving Leftovers

Some might say that one of the best parts of Thanksgiving is the leftovers. These recipes have all the festivity and none of the guilt.

Rosner’s Domain | Moving Rightward, Again?

When an Israeli says “I shifted to the right,” he or she is sending us a message: I became more suspicious of peace processes, more skeptical of concessions, more demanding about security guarantees.

Understanding What We’re For in Four Words

There’s more work to do. The haters still hate. But, thanks to Zionism, we won – and will continue winning, while teaching the West about self-defense, self-reliance, and self-respect.

An Open Letter to The Harvard Crimson

Zionism is not optional. It is the recognition of a people’s reality and their internationally recognized right to a homeland. Treating it as debatable is racism not philosophy.

More news and opinions than at a Shabbat dinner, right in your inbox.