Jewish Heirs Sue Germany in US Court for Medieval Treasure Acquired by Nazis
Error: Contact form not found.
by JNS.org

A piece in the Guelph treasure. Heirs of Jewish art dealers who once owned the collection are suing Germany to have it returned. Photo: PRUSSIAN CULTURAL HERITAGE FOUNDATION
JNS.org – The descendants of Jewish art dealers persecuted during the Holocaust have filed a U.S. lawsuit against Germany, asking that a German museum return a Medieval Christian art collection that belonged to their ancestors.
The collection, known as the Welfenschatz, is worth an estimated $226 million and was collected over centuries by the Braunschweig Cathedral. The original collection had more than 80 pieces, including works from the Middle Ages such as ornate gold and silver containers used to store Christian relics. Some of the artifacts are more than 800 years old.
In 1929, the Welfenschatz collection was acquired by a consortium of Jewish art dealers who had purchased it from a Braunschweig duke. During the early Nazi era, the Jewish dealers sold what remained of the collection to Prussia, which was controlled by the Nazis. The plaintiffs’ attorneys claim that the art dealers were forced to sell the artifacts at prices far below their market value. This is disputed by the Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation, which says that the collection was housed at the time in the Netherlands, which did not come under Nazi rule until 1940.
Attorney Nicholas O’Donnell, however, told the Associated Press that “any transaction in 1935, where the sellers on the one side were Jews and the buyer on the other side was the Nazi state, itself is by definition a void transaction.”
Since the 1960s, the collection has been displayed in Berlin’s Museum of Decorative Arts. The lawsuit, which was filed Monday in the U.S. District Court in Washington, DC, is the the most recent attempt to reclaim art works by the descendants of their Nazi-era owners, many of whom were Jewish.
‘Not My Job’: UN Official Says Did Not Review Evidence Before Blacklisting Israel for Sex-Crimes Alongside Hamas
Russia Recalls Its Ambassador to Armenia Due to Yerevan’s EU Ties
UAE Carried Out Dozens of Airstrikes on Iran Alongside the US and Israel During War
Trump Says He Will Soon Decide on Iran Deal, Demands Reopening of Hormuz Strait
Pentagon Chief Says US Ready to Restart Strikes on Iran If No Deal
Iran’s Global Terror Network Sparks Growing Alarm Across the West
Michigan Dem Senate Candidate Admits Own Party Has an Antisemitism Problem
Yad Vashem to Open First Overseas Education Center in Germany Amid Push to Combat Rising Global Antisemitism
California School District Settles Major Antisemitism Lawsuit With Victims Who Alleged Rampant Abuse
British Museum Confirms New Date for Jewish Culture Month Event Initially Postponed Amid Fears of Protests





Pentagon Chief Says US Ready to Restart Strikes on Iran If No Deal
Trump Says He Will Soon Decide on Iran Deal, Demands Reopening of Hormuz Strait
UAE Carried Out Dozens of Airstrikes on Iran Alongside the US and Israel During War
‘Not My Job’: UN Official Says Did Not Review Evidence Before Blacklisting Israel for Sex-Crimes Alongside Hamas
Russia Recalls Its Ambassador to Armenia Due to Yerevan’s EU Ties



