j
j advertisecontact usabout us  
search
j J, The Jewish news weekly of Northern California
j
Newsletter
Subscriptions
Change_Address

news
columns
letters
views
the arts
calendar
lifecycles
torah

supplements
classifieds
web links
candlelighting times
personals


Home
     
 

Friday April 4, 1997

Did Louvre realize art was stolen?

LEE YANOWITCH
Jewish Telegraphic Agency

PARIS -- The head of France's state-run museums is objecting to accusations that institutions such as the Louvre, Musee d'Orsay and Pompidou Center deliberately avoided tracing the rightful owners of nearly 2,000 works of art looted from Jews during World War II.

Reacting to what has become one of the latest controversies surrounding Europe's wartime history, Francoise Cachin, director of the Musees de France, said the museums had been treated unjustly.

"We have been wronged because these works of art were always traceable," Cachin said. "We may not have published a special catalog of them, but they have been included in inventories since the 1950s."

The 1,995 paintings, drawings and sculptures seized or purchased by the Nazis during the occupation of France were returned after the war and provisionally entrusted to French museums, which were required by law to seek out the owners of the works or their heirs.

Cachin said most of the paintings -- 1,878 are at the Louvre -- were never claimed "because they were not stolen during the occupation but sold," mostly by art dealers to German officers.

The works include sculptures by Rodin and paintings by Picasso, Monet, Cezanne and Renoir.

Serge Cwajgenbaum, secretary general of the Paris-based European Jewish Congress, said most of the works were bought by shady art dealers for far below their value from Jews in urgent need of money because their lives were in danger.

Lawyer Arno Klarsfeld, son of Nazi hunter Serge Klarsfeld, said the museums' intention "was to keep what they had, to accumulate more and above all not to give anything back."

"It's the reflex of a thief. If something he steals is taken, he feels he's been robbed," Arno Klarsfeld added.

Hector Feliciano, a Puerto Rican journalist who first revealed the existence of Jewish-owned art in state museums, said in an interview, "There was a complete void in terms of intention or desire to locate the owners."

The museums "don't want to give them up."

He said his request to see inventories of the works or to speak with curators was rejected.

"They told me the inventory was still being completed. I was astonished. Still being completed after 50 years?" he said, adding that a promise made by Cachin to list the complete inventory on the Internet by the end of 1996 had not been fulfilled.




Did you find this article interesting? Subscribe to our FREE newsletter and you'll be notified each week when "J." goes online. We'll tell you about the most important stories of the week and give you a link to each one.

This page contains a BETA version of Amazon contextual links. They are marked by the dashed underline.  Your purchases support our site. At times they point to items which are not related to the actual link. Please alert us by email if you discover objectionable links.

 

Get hard-to-find
Kosher Items!


Featured Jobs powered by JewishCareers.com
More Local Jobs Post Jobs Post Your Resume Search Jobs


     
  Copyright ©2007, San Francisco Jewish Community Publications Inc., dba J. the Jewish news weekly of Northern California. All rights reserved.    

Advertise | Contact Us | About Us | News | Features | Columns | Letters | Views | The Arts
Calendar | Lifecycles | Torah | Supplements | Classifieds | Web Links | Candlelighting | Personals | Back Issues | Home