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The Jewish Chronicle

Survivors need justice, while there is still time

Restitution to victims of the Nazis is now a matter of urgency

July 2, 2009 11:08

By

Lord Janner

2 min read

In Prague this week, I addressed the Holocaust Era Assets Conference with representatives from nearly 50 countries. I found myself reflecting on how far we have come since the London Conference on Nazi Gold, some 12 years ago, yet with so much still to achieve.

I was joined by a number of British colleagues, including my hero, Holocaust survivor Ben Helfgott MBE, and members of the Commission for Looted Art in Europe, all of us hoping for concrete progress. Pride in what we have achieved is tempered by the knowledge that there remains much to do if we are to fulfil our duty to those murdered by the Nazis and to others who suffered greatly but survived.

Ambassador Stuart Eizenstat, a driving force in this cause for well over a decade, said that the conference represents “one of the last chances” to ensure that justice prevails. How right he is. The legacy of the Holocaust weighs heavily on all of us. But history will judge the nations that participated by their conduct today — and while Holocaust survivors are still with us, we must do everything possible both to honour them and their families who perished, and to advance the cause of restitution and justice.

I vividly recall meeting Sir Malcolm Rifkind when he was Foreign Secretary, to persuade him to launch an inquiry. He did, and his successor, Robin Cook, brought the world to London for the first Nazi gold conference in 1997. Britain’s role in setting the agenda was powerful — and we can take pride in this.