Georg Kareski

Georg Kareski (21 October 1878 – 2 or 3 August 1947) was a German banker and Jewish Revisionist Zionist activist known for publicly defending the Nuremberg Laws in an interview published in the Nazi newspaper Der Angriff in 1935.

[1] Kareski was born in Posen (Poznań), ruled by the German Empire on 21 October 1878.

[4][5][1] Although the content of the interview did not differ dramatically from the positions that other German Zionists had taken in attempted accommodation with the Nazi regime, Kareski's interview attracted more attention because of its publication in a Nazi newspaper and threats against Jews who differed from his views.

[1] As a result of his roles in Germany, Zionist Germans repudiated him and severely criticized his actions, including a campaign by the Hitachduch Olej Germania (HOG), linked to the Zionistische Vereinigung für Deutschland that already expelled Kareski from their ranks in 1933.

During his visit to Mandatory Palestine in 1937, before his evetual migration, the HOG published a series of accusation that included his collaboration and use of Nazi institutions to force himself on the leadership of Jewish organizations in Germany.