Seventy years
after the end of the Holocaust (Shoah) in which six million Jews - seventy-five
percent of the Jewish population of Europe - were murdered, most private and communal immovable and
movable property illegitimately seized from Jews has not been returned to its
rightful owners, their heirs, or to the Jewish people at large. Many Holocaust
survivors live in poverty and without adequate social care.
We are
witnessing today an unprecedented growth of antisemitism, Holocaust denial,
racism and xenophobia in Europe, while the international community is not doing
enough to address the legacy of the Holocaust and the issue of restitution of,
or compensation for, confiscated goods and property from the Holocaust era and
its aftermath.
Despite firm positions
taken by the European Parliament and related commitments taken by individual
states, the restitution and compensation regarding Jewish property in several
European countries continues to proceed very slowly or not at all, while the
social welfare needs of aging Holocaust survivors increase rapidly and become
even more urgent.
In this
context, and upon the invitation of the Director General of the Israel Ministry
of Foreign Affairs in collaboration with the Israel Ministry for Social Equality,
Special Envoys and Special Representatives for Holocaust Related Issues from
various countries as well as representatives of the World Jewish Restitution
Organization, the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, and the
European Shoah Legacy Institute (ESLI) participated in an International
Coordination Forum for the Restitution of, or compensation for, Holocaust Era
Assets. The Forum was held in Jerusalem
on June 8-9, 2016 in the presence of diplomatic representatives from the EU,
European Union countries, the United States and others.
The
participants reiterated their political commitment to the following
international resolutions and declarations that call for the restitution of, or
compensation for, immovable property, art, Judaica and other cultural assets
looted during the Holocaust era and its aftermath; the provision of adequate
and immediate social welfare support for Holocaust survivors, the demarcation,
protection and preservation of Jewish cemeteries, mass graves and other burial
sites, and the promotion of Holocaust education, research and remembrance:
- European Parliament resolutions (Resolution
on the Return of Plundered Property to Jewish Communities, December 1995; Resolution
on the Restitution of the Possessions of Holocaust Victims, July 1998; Resolution
and Report of the Committee on Legal Affairs and Internal Market, December
2003);
- The
Washington Conference Principles on Nazi-looted Art (December 1998) and the
Vilnius Forum Declaration (October 2000);
- The Terezin
Declaration of the Holocaust Era Assets Conference endorsed by 47 countries in
Prague (June 2009) and the related Guidelines and Best Practices on Property
Restitution and Compensation endorsed by 43 countries (June 2010);
- The
Concluding Statement of the Immovable Property Review Conference in Prague
(November 2012);
- The
Concluding Statement of the International Conference on Welfare for Holocaust
Survivors in Prague (May 2015).
The
participants also:
- Commended as a first step in this regard
the recent appointment of the European Commission Special Coordinator for
Combating Antisemitism and welcomed the commitment of the European Commission
to combat antisemitism and Holocaust denial;
- Commended the recent
positive developments on the restitution of property in Serbia, Romania, and
Latvia and encouraged these states and others to continue to make progress on
restitution;
- Took note of the importance of
addressing relevant concerns in the European Commission, the European
Parliament and national parliaments;
- Took note of the desire to promote
closer cooperation and association of ESLI with the relevant institutions of
the European Union, in order to coordinate and promote the implementation of
the Terezin Declaration, in accordance with the Joint Declaration by the European
Commission and the Czech Republic Presidency of the European Council in Prague on
June 29, 2009.
Considering the urgency of the matter, the participants reaffirmed
their commitment to intensify efforts on the international and national levels with
the aim:
1. To promote
the legacy of the Holocaust (Shoah), and to promote the restitution and
compensation of immovable property, art, Judaica and other cultural assets
looted during the Holocaust era and its aftermath within the European Union
institutions;
2. To convene an
international conference on restorative justice and Holocaust era asset restitution
in Brussels, organized by ESLI in cooperation with other stakeholders and partners;
3. To intensify
the sharing of best practices and the exchange of information with the engagement
of ESLI, individual states and related organizations, on the basis of the Guidelines
and Best Practices on Property Restitution and Compensation seized during the
Holocaust Era;
4. To encourage all 47 states that endorsed
the Terezin Declaration to appoint Special Envoys for Holocaust Related Issues,
including restorative justice and restitution;
5. To further encourage, assist and facilitate
individual states to resolve, according to the Terezin Declaration principles,
the restitution and compensation of looted property and to address the growing
social welfare needs of Holocaust survivors.