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(JTA) — Croatia will give land and an office building in Zagreb collectively valued at about $4 million to the city’s Jewish community as restitution for property expropriated during World War II.
The Jewish quarter in Hungary has fallen prey to developers that sometimes appear more intent on making a quick buck than on preserving the area’s historic character. In the process, experts say ...
Marko Ivanovic points to a large building his father bought in the Old Quarter of the Croatian ... who is head of the Jewish Museum in Zagreb and a documentary filmmaker. Holocaust survivor ...
About 1,000 Jews live in Zagreb, with smaller numbers in Osijek, Split, Dubrovnik and five other cities, according to Saša Cvetković, vice president of the Jewish Community of Zagreb.
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