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Itamar Lev in

    Leḳsiḳon ha-Shoʾah
    Yom ḥoshekh ṿa-afelah
    Shod ṿa-shever
    The last deposit
    His majesty's enemies
    • His majesty's enemies

      • 272pagine
      • 10 ore di lettura

      Levin, the journalist who uncovered the affair, describes British policy toward the Jewish people during the Holocaust era, particularly the construction of obstacles that prevented thousands from being saved. Levin then examines Britain's intentional and unabashed use of Holocaust victims and survivors' property after World War II.This is the first book to describe this affair, which is relatively unknown to the general public, but which has already been described by public figures as one of the most serious incidents of the looting of Holocaust victims' property. Levin documents, from British Public Office files, the cynical manner in which His Majesty's government expropriated victims' assets in order to compensate British citizens who had claims against former enemy countries. He also describes the suffering of survivors until some of them managed after years of struggle to retrieve small portions of their property. He also deals with the struggle for a change in British policy which began with the publication of Levin's investigative report in June, 1997 and which continues to the present. An important book for anyone concerned with the Holocaust and British contemporary history.

      His majesty's enemies
    • Levin broke this story in 1995, revealing "the Jewish people's decades-long effort to return death camp victims' assets to their rightful heirs." He showed that "long after the Nazis had seized the belongings of Holocaust victims, Swiss banks concealed and appropriated their assets, demanding that their survivors produce the death certificates or banking records of the depositors in order to claim their family's property"--Jacket

      The last deposit