thumb|1952 demonstration in Israel against any deals with Germany. On stage is [[Menachem Begin. The sign reads: "Our honor shall not be sold for money; our blood shall not be atoned by goods. We shall wipe out the disgrace!"]] thumb|Jerusalem railcar manufactured by [[Maschinenfabrik Esslingen, as part of the reparations agreement with Germany.]]
thumb|1952 demonstration in Israel against any deals with Germany. On stage is [[Menachem Begin. The sign reads: "Our honor shall not be sold for money; our blood shall not be atoned by goods. We shall wipe out the disgrace!"]] thumb|Jerusalem railcar manufactured by [[Maschinenfabrik Esslingen, as part of the reparations agreement with Germany.]]
Wiedergutmachung (; German: "compensation", "restitution", lit: "make good again") refers to the reparations that the German government agreed to pay in 1953 to the direct survivors of the Holocaust, and to those who were made to work at forced labour camps or who otherwise became victims of the Nazis. The sum would amount, through the years, to over 100 billion Deutsche Mark. Historian Tony Judt writes about Wiedergutmachung:
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).