Holocaust victims’ kin file lawsuit
DESCENDANTS of Holocaust victims have filed a lawsuit in the US claiming France’s national railway SNCF seized property of tens of thousands of Jews and others sent to Nazi concentration camps from France, according to court documents.
The class-action suit seeks compensation for the confiscated personal property, the sale of these items and for third-class train fares billed to the Nazis even though the victims were packed into cattle cars.
It was filed on Thursday, on International Holocaust Remembrance Day, in US federal court in Chicago.
“SNCF committed, conspired to commit and aided and abetted others who committed war crimes and crimes against humanity,” the court document said. “Acting with full knowledge, SNCF was complicit in the commission of genocide.”
SNCF was not immediately available for comment.
The personal property seized includes cash, securities, silver, gold, jewelry, works of art, musical instruments, clothing and equipment.
The goods were “illegally, improperly and coercively taken from the ownership or control of an individual during the deportations,” according to the suit.
In a landmark deal, France agreed in December to pay US$60 million to the US to be shared among American and foreign nationals deported to Nazi death camps on French trains during World War II.
The lead plaintiff in the case is Karen Scalin, a Chicago resident whose grandparents were sent from France on an SNCF train to Poland’s Auschwitz concentration camp, where they died in November 1942.
The two other named plaintiffs, Josiane Piquard and Roland Cherrier, are both French citizens and residents whose relatives were deported to Auschwitz and died there during the war.
“SNCF’s unlawful and torturous conduct as described herein was done intentionally, maliciously and wantonly, and for the purpose of obtaining revenues for and maintaining the independence of SNCF,” according to the lawsuit.
“Plaintiffs are thereby entitled to an award of punitive damages as well as compensatory damages.”
The suit also spoke of a “mutually beneficial” relationship between the SNCF and the Nazis.
“The Nazis received the human fodder for their Final Solution, as well as the victims’ property, all through the collaboration of SNCF,” the suit said.
The plaintiffs say the US federal court has jurisdiction over the matter because the claims arise under international law enforceable in the Chicago court as federal law.
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