German family evicted from home after 85 years after Nazis forced residents to sell their house
13 Articles
13 Articles
In eastern Germany, a family lost ownership of their home after 85 years. The judge ruled that it was not theirs because the Nazis had forced the Jewish previous occupants to sell the house in 1939. The German family then moved into the house.
An East German family has lost their home after 85 years, after its original Jewish owners had to sell it in the 1930s. The German Federal Administrative Court decided on Wednesday that the rules on compensation for victims of the Nazi regime apply to the property. The verdict cannot be appealed.
In Wandlitz near Berlin, a family must return their house, as the Federal Administrative Court has ruled. Ancestors had unlawfully purchased the property from Jews in 1939. An 84-year-old is also affected.
The woman and her son appealed the decision that she had to give up the home, but this was rejected.
In eastern Germany, a family has lost ownership of their home after 85 years. The judge ruled that it is not theirs because the Nazis forced the Jewish previous occupants to sell the house in 1939.
A family that has lived in a house in Brandenburg for 85 years must now move out. The reason: It had previously belonged to two Jewish women who were forced to sell during the Nazi era.
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