In this Book

The Great Repair: Emotions, Memory, and the German–Jewish Settlement after the Holocaust

Book
Gideon Reuveni
2026
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The Great Repair explores how Jews and Germans began reparations discussions fewer than seven years after the Holocaust—a momentous achievement relegated to the margins of Holocaust scholarship and memory—and the complexities that emerged from the resulting settlement.

Gideon Reuveni illuminates the swift transition and extraordinary chapter in postwar history from the horrors of the Holocaust to a negotiating table where Germans and Jews discussed reparations. Both sides faced the monumental challenge of addressing the injustices of National Socialism through complex deliberations on compensation for collective and individual losses, restitution of property, support for survivors, and formal acknowledgment of Nazi crimes. These negotiations marked a crucial step toward acknowledging historical responsibility and pursuing meaningful redress.

The Great Repair reveals the events, actors, and decisions that led to the signing of the agreement on September 10, 1952, by West Germany, Israel, and the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany. Ultimately, the enactment of this settlement set a global precedent that genocide cannot go unpunished and moral debts must be paid. It was a historic undertaking of immense scope—unmatched in the history of international relations, just as the extermination of the Jewish people was unprecedented in human history.

Table of Contents

Cover

Frontmatter

pp. i-iv

Contents

pp. v

List of Abbreviations

pp. vi-viii

Introduction: The Great German-Jewish Repair

pp. 1-16

Chapter 1. “Will There Yet Come Days of Forgiveness and Grace” The Jewish Search for Reckoning and the German Politics of Wiedergutmachung

pp. 17-55

Chapter 2. In Search of Amends Israel’s German Question

pp. 56-89

Chapter 3. Decisions and First Encounters Mobilizing Support for Israel’s Claim Against Germany

pp. 90-184

Chapter 4. Negotiating the German-Jewish Settlement Coming out and “Don’t Mention the War” Approach

pp. 185-275

Chapter 5. The Making and the Forgetting of History Communicative Action and the Politics of Dignity

pp. 276-321

Epilogue: Looking Back to the Future of the German-Jewish Settlement

pp. 322-334

Acknowledgments

pp. 335-336

Notes

pp. 337-388

Index

pp. 389-394
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