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Interview: Efraim Zuroff

No matter if they're old and frail. Nazis must never rest

February 4, 2010 09:59
Efraim Zuroff is hoping to bring at least five Nazis to trial before they die off. “That would be fantastic,” he says

By

Simon Round,

Simon Round

5 min read

Efraim Zuroff is running out of time. Zuroff is a Nazi-hunter — in fact, since Simon Wiesenthal’s death in 2005, he has become the world’s most prominent hunter of Nazi war criminals. However, the number of those who perpetrated the Holocaust has been reduced by the passage of time. Those who remain alive are in their late 80s and 90s. Despite this, Zuroff has vowed to give them no respite.

The American-born activist, a physically imposing figure with a New York accent unaffected by many decades of life in Israel, claims that there are hundreds, perhaps thousands, of unprosecuted Nazi war criminals living out their years peacefully. “The question for us,” he says, “is how to find the evidence. Even now, we examine one or two new aspects every month.”

His final push to round up those guilty of the Holocaust started seven years ago with the launch of Operation Last Chance by the Simon Wiesenthal Centre, for whom he works. The campaign has yielded results. “We had over 3,000 calls. Those calls yielded the names of 540 suspects that we did not know about. Any name that we are given has to pass three tests. First of all there is credibility. It’s possible that someone has had a row with their 85-year-old neighbour who has a German accent. Then, he has to be alive and able to stand trial and not have been before the courts already. There were over 100 cases we uncovered, including six very serious ones.”

Sixty-one-year-old Zuroff is a quarter of a century younger than the youngest suspects he is chasing. Could it be that hunting and prosecuting elderly people is actually counterproductive? Zuroff is adamant that the hunt will go on to the bitter end. “I have never encountered a single case of a Nazi war criminal who expressed any remorse — not one.”