{"id":203313,"date":"2021-06-14T17:41:43","date_gmt":"2021-06-14T17:41:43","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/radiofree.asia\/?guid=faa7adf1056a689c3b2971fd7cfb67ea"},"modified":"2021-06-14T17:41:43","modified_gmt":"2021-06-14T17:41:43","slug":"germany-gave-my-family-reparations-palestinians-deserve-the-same-from-israel","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/2021\/06\/14\/germany-gave-my-family-reparations-palestinians-deserve-the-same-from-israel\/","title":{"rendered":"Germany Gave My Family Reparations. Palestinians Deserve the Same From Israel."},"content":{"rendered":"\"An<\/a>

I am a first-generation American. My Jewish parents fled Germany as the horrors of the Holocaust were unfolding. They left behind family who perished in camps and were killed as they fled from their homes while being chased and shot at by Nazis.<\/p>\n

My great-grandfather, grandfather and father had a thriving butcher business in Frankfurt. They lived in the apartment building next to the butcher shop. My father always said he barely realized he was Jewish until Hitler arrived. It was always Deutschland \u00fcber alles<\/em>.<\/p>\n

My mother\u2019s family were wheat traders in Wetzlar. After the rise of Hitler, my mother fled Germany first so that she could learn the language in her new country and make enough money to bring over her parents and brother. They came to the U.S. without much money and like many, had to build a life from the bottom up.<\/p>\n

Once the war was over, Germany gave my father reparations for the loss of his business as well as for the crime of persecution. He received a monthly check until his death at the age of 91. Both of my parents were welcomed back by the German government and told they could get their passports and citizenship returned.<\/p>\n

Those born to Holocaust survivors who can prove that their father was forced from his homeland between the years 1933-1945 have the right to become German citizens along with all of their children, grandchildren and all future progeny forever. Last year, my children, grandchildren and I became German citizens, and were given European passports.<\/p>\n

As I think about my own family and its history, I wonder why the 750,000 Palestinians forced from their homes and land in 1948 when Israel was founded are not entitled to the same treatment my family received after WWII ended. But the war on Palestinians was never over. Instead, Israel continues to this day its policy of ethnic cleansing, as evidenced by the current expulsions in Sheikh Jarrah and other parts of East Jerusalem.<\/p>\n

B\u2019Tselem, a human rights organization in Israel, and Human Rights Watch have documented and denounced the continuing maltreatment of Palestinians by the Israeli government and the settler movement, including the confiscation of Palestinians\u2019 lands and houses; the restrictions on movement; the limitations on rights of free speech and assembly; the denial of building permits; the denial of many basic civil rights and the terrorizing by Jewish settler extremists backed by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF). Human Rights Watch has concluded that conduct toward the Palestinians amounts to persecution and apartheid, which are crimes against humanity under international law.<\/p>\n