Claim on Guelph Treasure can go to trial in US federal court

Arts

This cupola reliquary is part of the Guelph Treasure, displayed at the Kunstgewerbemuseum (Museum of Decorative Arts) in Berlin
Photo: AFP Photo/Tobias Schwarz

An appeals court in Washington, DC has upheld a federal court's decision that a claim for the Guelph Treasure, a collection of 42 medieval works now in a German museum, can go to trial in the US.

The claim by heirs of Jewish art dealers who allegedly sold the objects under duress to the Nazi leader Hermann Goering is being made against the Prussian Cultural Foundation (Preussische Kulturbesitz, or SPK) which oversees the Museum of Applied Art (Kustgewerbemuseum) in Berlin, where the objects are held.

Both the SPK and the federal government of Germany had appealed a lower court decision to send the case to trial. The appeals court removed Germany as a defendant but rejected arguments by the government-funded SPK to dismiss the case.

The Guelph Treasure, or Welfenschatz, is a group of several dozen medieval and religious works from the 11thto 15thcenturies that got their name from the historic Welf dynasty, or Welfenhaus, and were kept in the cathedral of Brunswick (Braunschweig). In 1929, a consortium of three art dealers purchased the works, touring them in Europe and the US, and selling some of the objects.

In 1935, while the Nazi persecution of Jews intensified, the dealers sold the remaining works of the Guelph Treasure to the Prussian State, which was believed to be acting on behalf of the Nazi leader Herman Goering. He profited from their hardship by paying them only 35% of the works value, the heirs lawyers say. After the sale, most of the dealers fled Germany and one died under questionable circumstances. Goering presented the works as a gift to the German chancellor Adolf Hitler.

US forces recovered the treasure at the end of the war and eventually put it in the hands of the SPK. The heirs to the dealers brought the case in the US in 2014, frustrated by the slow pace of the official and non-binding German Advisory Commission for the Return of Cultural Property Seized as a Result of Nazi Persecution, Especially Jewish Property. (The advisory board was originally set up to avoid the time and expense of private litigation over Nazi-looted objects.) The heirs demanded the return of the objects or $250m.

The case is one of the first affected by Americas recently enacted Holocaust Expropriated Art Recovery (Hear) Act, signed by President Barack Obama, which makes it easier for the heirs of victims of the Nazi regime to file restitution claims in the US. Germany and the SKP argued that US courts had no authority over the dispute and that private litigation interfered with foreign policy between Germany and the US.

Lawyers for the SPK also disputed the idea that the financial persecution of Jews in Germany in 1935, when the sale took place, constituted genocide. “There may be a genocidal intent there,” said one of the SPKs lawyers, “but its still not a genocidal act.” But the appeals Judge Thomas Griffith warned: “You have a tough argument to make in separating this from the other horrors that were taking place in Nazi Germany at this time”.

Hermann Parzinger, the president of SPK, said in a statement issued after the decision: “It is SPKs long-held belief that this case should not be heard in US court, and we remain committed to demonstrating that the case has no merit, as the Guelph Treasures sale more than 80 years ago was not a forced sale due to Nazi persecution.” The agency is now weighing its next steps in court.

But the German reaction has caused disbelief in some. “No one knows German history better than the Germans, having lived it and having litigated it for 70 years, and its very distressing to hear them say such troubling things,” says the lawyer Thomas Kline, a veteran of Holocaust Era restitution cases.

“The case is important because it shows Germany just doesnt get it,” said Nicholas ODonnell, the lawyer representing the heirs.

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