Recognition and compensation
Forced labourers organized themselves into associations immediately after their return.
At first, they claimed pensions and assistance in the search for missing persons.
From the mid-1950s onwards, they demanded compensation, reacting to Germany's negative stance on this request. In 1961, this struggle yielded its first results with the Greek-German Agreement on compensation for victims of Nazism. Ultimately, however, beneficiaries received only the first installment, covering just 55% of the amounts requested.
In the period after the restoration of democracy (1974), the associations were involved in advocating for the recognition of the National Resistance.
In 2000, Germany belatedly recognized those displaced for forced labour as a distinct category of victims of the Nazi regime. The German state provided compensation to surviving victims
through the "Memory, Responsibility, Future" Foundation.