Campaign Launched to Return Personal Effects to Victims of Nazi PersecutionThey help people like Martine van Dam, writes The Times of Israel’s Renee Ghert-Zand. Dam’s grandfather perished in 1986 after surviving the Holocaust. She never knew what he looked like, as she was born seven years after he died and the family didn’t have any photographs.Tracing the fates of the millions of victims who lived during the Holocaust is a daunting task. But this is the work of the International Tracing Service (ITS), whose new campaign #StolenMemory hopes to return confiscated wartime items, like wallets, photos, and jewelry, to family members. They help people like Martine van Dam, writes The Times of Israel’s Renee Ghert-Zand. Dam’s grandfather perished in 1986 after surviving the Holocaust. She never knew what he looked like, as she was born seven years after he died and the family didn’t have any photographs:
They help people like Martine van Dam, writes The Times of Israel’s Renee Ghert-Zand. Dam’s grandfather perished in 1986 after surviving the Holocaust. She never knew what he looked like, as she was born seven years after he died and the family didn’t have any photographs. |
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