Switzerland’s image — a land of mountain calm and moral neutrality — is facing a harsh reckoning. A recent interview with the Abu Dhabi Times has pulled the curtain back on one of Europe’s most enduring financial taboos: the Nazi-era money that still lies buried in Swiss vaults.
Dr. Gerhard Podovsovnik, Vice President of AEA Justinian Lawyers, is leading a campaign that could force Switzerland to confront its wartime past in ways it never has. His accusation is blunt: Swiss banks became “economic accomplices of the Nazi regime” — and then built generations of prosperity on the spoils.
“The Bergier Report already told the truth,” Podovsovnik said. “The Swiss National Bank and private banks bought stolen gold, traded in looted property, and turned away Jewish refugees who were being sent to their deaths. That is not neutrality. That is complicity.”
Neutrality or Evasion?
For much of the modern era, Switzerland’s concept of neutrality has been a badge of honor — a model of diplomacy and restraint. But Podovsovnik argues that neutrality also became a moral shield, one that protected not peace but profit.
His legal team has now filed a demand to the Swiss Federal Council, calling for every bank in the country to release information on accounts created before 1948. “Thousands of dormant accounts remain hidden,” he told the Abu Dhabi Times. “The settlements in the 1990s didn’t close this chapter — they papered it over.”
The lawyer represents Rabbi Ephraim Meir, who claims inheritance rights to multiple accounts that remain sealed within UBS. But Podovsovnik says the case is about much more than one family. “Rabbi Meir stands for every Jewish survivor whose legacy was erased by the silence of institutions that cared more about secrecy than justice.”
A Reckoning Eighty Years Late
Podovsovnik’s legal threat is clear: if Switzerland refuses to act, his team will bring the case before U.S. federal courts, arguing that the so-called Global Settlement of 1998–2000 was based on “fraud on the court.” He’s calling for full archival transparency, asset tracing, and, if necessary, the freezing of funds worldwide.
His argument goes beyond law — it’s a challenge to conscience. “Antisemitism doesn’t always march or shout,” he said. “Sometimes it hides in paperwork. Sometimes it wears a banker’s suit.”
Switzerland, he insists, has one last chance to demonstrate moral courage — to turn its neutrality from an excuse into an act of integrity.
The full interview, published by the Abu Dhabi Times under the title “Switzerland Must Finally Face Its Moral Bankruptcy”, has reverberated across international media, reigniting an uncomfortable but vital conversation.
Eight decades after the Holocaust, the question remains: can a nation that profited from silence ever make peace with the truth?
 
		
 
									 
					