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WSWS : News
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Israel: One third of Holocaust survivors live in poverty
By Bill Van Auken
18 April 2007
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Israel marked its annual Holocaust Remembrance Day Monday not
only with the traditional wailing of air raid sirens, but also
with protests over the government neglect and right-wing social
policies that have left one-third of the countrys Holocaust
survivors living in poverty, with little or no assistance.
A number of organizations, including the Israeli pensioners
rights group Ken Lazaken, boycotted the official Holocaust Remembrance
Day ceremonies to call attention to the plight of more than 80,000
survivors living below the poverty line, which in Israel is set
at 2,000 shekels (486 dollars) a month for a single person.
Approximately 1,000 Holocaust survivors, students and others
joined in a demonstration and March of the Living
Monday that went from the Israeli Knesset to the Yad Vashem Holocaust
memorial, the site of the official proceedings, to protest these
conditions.
Some of the protesters referred to Israels denial
of its Holocaust survivors.
On the eve of the annual day of remembrance for the millions
slaughtered by the Nazi regime, various government agencies and
advocacy groups prepared reports spelling out the deepening poverty
that tens of thousands of survivors confront in Israel.
According to figures presented by the National Insurance Institute
and other Israeli agencies, out of the 250,000 Holocaust survivors
living in Israel, 20,000 receive reparations from Germany and
another 40,000 are paid stipends by the state. The overwhelming
majority, however, receive no support whatsoever.
Thousands of the survivors die annually, with 70 percent of
them older than 76, and 20 percent older than 86.
The state stipends themselves amount to barely $300 a month,
not enough to pay for basic necessities. Those fortunate
enough to receive this meager sum must decide whether to buy food
or get the medicine necessary for their survival, said Colette
Avital, a Member of the Knesset, who has advocated for Holocaust
survivors.
We keep being very critical of those people who have
not admitted guilt or deny that there was a Holocaust, but here
we are ignoring the people who are living in dire poverty,
Avital added.
I feel deeply ashamed, the situation were faced
with in terms of the conditions Holocaust survivors are living
in is completely absurd, Israeli Social Affairs Minister
Isaac Herzog said on Sunday in response to the reports.
Under Israeli law, those survivors who arrived in Israel after
1953 are ineligible for government benefits. The Israeli government
believes that a large share of the survivors living in poverty
is made up of more recent immigrants from the Soviet Union and
Eastern Europe.
Some of the Holocaust survivors themselves vented their anger
at government callousness and neglect at a Knesset hearing held
April 10, accusing government officials of deliberately humiliating
those seeking medical care and other assistance.
Those survivors seeking disability benefits must go before
a medical committee and prove that their disability stems from
persecution by the Nazis.
The Israeli daily Haaretz quoted Tova Pedens as saying
that state functionaries had urged her to feign insanity to improve
her chances of getting state aid.
Abraham Berkowitz, a survivor who immigrated to Israel from
Romania, came to a medical committee because of dental problems.
The panel told him he could receive money only for teeth
he lost in the Holocaust.
Rachel Biyale, another survivor, declared, Hannah Arendt
wrote of Adolf Eichmanns Banality of Evil. The [Israeli]
treasury adopts a banality of deception.
In essence, the conditions confronting tens of thousands of
Holocaust survivors reflect the deepening impoverishment of large
sections of the Israeli population and growing social inequality
resulting from Israels militarized economy and successive
cuts to social spending.
A record 1.6 million Israelisnearly a quarter of the
populationnow live below the poverty line. Child poverty
is even worse, standing at 35.2 percent, worse than in any advanced
capitalist country.
Government agencies recently reported that some 200,000 Israeli
families11 percent of the populationdepend upon soup
kitchens for their daily meals.
At the same time, government policies have generated substantially
more wealth for Israels class of super rich, leading to
an ever wider gap between wealth and poverty.
It is under these conditions that the plight of the impoverished
Holocaust survivors has captured the attention of the Israeli
public. The government and the political establishment as a whole
are clearly apprehensive about the political implications of the
exposure of the conditions facing this layer of Israeli society,
whose fate has been invoked for decades as a principal justification
for the creation of the Zionist state.
That they too are subjected to poverty and neglect can only
contribute to the growing social and political discontent among
broad layers of Israels working class.
See Also:
Letter from an Israeli reader
on the recent strike in Israel
[27 March 2007]
Jerusalem and Washington bring
Palestinians to the brink of starvation
[21 March 2007]
UN rapporteur says Israels
occupation of Palestine resembles apartheid
[14 March 2007]
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