News:

Auschwitz Museum lost, then found 16,000 belongings of Holocaust victims

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1970
1945
Christian Science Monitor 8 June 2016
By Ben Rosen

The rediscovery was announced the same week US senators said it is a 'moral duty' to return artwork Nazis looted to Jewish owners.

The Auschwitz Museum in Poland announced it rediscovered thousands of personal items that belonged to Jews killed in the concentration camp, the same week that three US senators, an Academy Award-winning actress, and the president of the World Jewish Congress said it's a "moral duty" to ensure Holocaust victims' families can recover art stolen from them during World War II....

"Art restitution is about preserving the fundamental human condition," Dame Helen Mirren, who starred in "Woman in Gold," about one woman's fight to recover her family's looted artwork, said to a panel of senators at a Tuesday hearing. "It gives Jewish people – and other victims of the Nazi terror – the opportunity to reclaim their history, their culture, their memories and, most importantly, their families." 

The legislation Mirren and a bipartisan group of senators promoted Tuesday, which would loosen the statute of limitations for families to recover looted art, is part of an effort to provide a more tangible restitution to Holocaust victims and their families. Soon after the war, many countries arranged monetary compensation and social services, followed by education campaigns. However, in many cases, efforts to return the physical belongings of Holocaust victims to their rightful owners – including valuable pieces of art – lagged, sometimes for decades.

The Nazis seized an untold number of personal effects from Jews, from 12,000 pieces of kitchenware to tens of thousands of pieces of artwork. The Commission for Art Recovery estimates about one-fifth of European art was stolen by Nazis during the war, according to NBC.  "What makes this particular crime even more despicable is that this art theft, probably the greatest in history, was continued by governments, museums and many knowing collectors in the decades following the war," Ronald Lauder, president of the World Jewish Congress and the former US ambassador to Austria, said during the Senate hearing. "This was the dirty secret of the post-war art world, and people who should have known better, were part of it."

The thousands of belongings the Auschwitz Museum rediscovered are unique, however, because they were simply forgotten about. The roughly 16,000 items – which include jewelry, kitchenware, cutlery, and watches – were originally uncovered near the camp's gas chambers in 1967, then individually catalogued and placed in 48 cardboard boxes.

Presumably, they were meant to be analyzed and studied, Piotr CywiƄski, the director of the museum, said in a statement. However, a political crisis broke out in Poland, likely delaying the research.


http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Global-News/2016/0608/Auschwitz-Museum-lost-then-found-16-000-belongings-of-Holocaust-victims
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