Friday April 21, 2000
France issues report on looted war assets
JOSHUA SCHUSTER Jewish Telegraphic Agency
PARIS -- A new report from a government-appointed panel goes further than ever in describing the looting of Jewish assets under the wartime Vichy regime, but some say France still has not come completely clean. The New York-based World Jewish Congress is not satisfied that the Matteoli Commission provided all the answers from that period -- particularly whether French state art museums have admitted to keeping paintings that were looted from Jewish hands. The report did say that France had previously "underestimated" the extent to which Nazi Germany and its French collaborators had looted money and property from Jews living in France. But while it stated that some $1.3 billion in assets had been seized from Jews, the panel maintained that more than 90 percent of those assets have since been returned to survivors or their heirs. Jean Matteoli, a former French resistance fighter and non-Jewish concentration camp survivor who headed the commission, said it was "profoundly revolting" that as early as 1940 the Vichy government took "measures that went beyond what the Nazis demanded." "This is something we did not want to hide" in the report, he said. The 3,000-page report, compiled by French historians and survivors, capped a three-year effort by France to acknowledge its role in Holocaust looting. The report covered seized bank accounts and insurance policies, confiscated homes, artwork and furniture, as well as the last possessions stripped from Jews as they made their way through French transit centers to Nazi death camps. Of the 330,000 Jews living in France in 1940, some 76,000 were deported to Nazi death camps. Only 2,500 returned. As part of its findings, the commission recommended that the French government and French banks contribute some $350 million to a Holocaust memorial foundation as compensation for unreturned Jewish assets. The commission also proposed that several artworks with no known heirs be donated to the Israel Museum in Jerusalem as testimony to the Nazi-era looting. Prime Minister Lionel Jospin said he agreed with the report's findings and promised to begin implementing its recommendations in the coming weeks. For its part, the WJC cautiously welcomed the report, but said it would nonetheless continue its own separate investigation. In the past, the WJC condemned the Matteoli panel for using "juvenile" statistics. It had also threatened legal action and boycotts against French businesses that failed to make adequate restitution. Critics of the report are focusing on the extent to which France's National Museums Authority has obstructed or hidden information about certain paintings. The Matteoli report says that of the tens of thousands of artworks recaptured from the Nazis after the war -- some 2,100 of which continue to hang in French museums -- only 163 were seized from Jews. "It is necessary to pose the question in a candid manner: Is it possible that the French museums have been enriched by the pillages of the Nazis?" said Elan Steinberg, the WJC's executive director. "If these paintings are stolen from individuals, that means they do not belong to the French state. For us, these are the last 'prisoners of war.' I believe the time is due for them to be released." Steinberg said his group will continue to prod the French government "to take a step further." "We want to see the French government accept the principle of restitution for these paintings, before anything else." French media are also openly wondering whether the report sufficiently acknowledges France's role in keeping Jewish assets. The daily Le Monde said the questions posed by the WJC do indeed have merit, as the National Museum Authority has until recently "consistently silenced or denied" allegations that it possessed looted art.
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