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Group of refugees' descendants plan legal challenge to 'sexist and ageist' rule denying them German citizenship

A loophole in Article 116 denies German citizenship to some Jewish descendants of refugees from the Nazis if their qualifying ancestor was female

December 6, 2018 11:51
The descendants of Dora Tannenbaum (pictures left in 1951 and right in 1980 with her grandchildren, including Eleanor Thom) are not entitled to German citizenship

By

Rosa Doherty,

rosa doherty

2 min read

A group of descendants of Jewish refugees from the Nazis is planning to mount a legal challenge to a “sexist and ageist” rule that denies them German citizenship because their qualifying ancestor was a woman.

The Association of Jewish Refugees said it knows of more than 100 people who have either been denied, or would be denied, citizenship.

Anyone who was persecuted on political, racial or religious grounds during the Nazi era, as well as their descendants, is eligible for German citizenship under Article 116 of the country’s constitution.

However, anyone born before 1953 — when the law on German nationality was changed — can only receive it if their qualifying ancestor was a man.

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