Showing posts with label Jews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jews. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Heartwarming tales of books looted by Nazis from Jews, being returned or compensated for.

Nazi-Looted Books Spell Decades of Labor for Libraries


Arthur Goldschmidt, a Leipzig dealer in animal feed and an exporter to South America, was more passionate about books than business. His private collection numbered 40,000 carefully indexed volumes and he engaged a librarian to take care of it.

After the Nazis seized power in 1933, Goldschmidt was persecuted as a Jew; his assets were liquidated and his company confiscated. For survival, he sold his treasured collection of 2,000 almanacs -- spanning three centuries -- for a pittance to the Goethe and Schiller Archive in Weimar. He fled in 1938.

Enlarge image Tanzenberg Monastery

Tanzenberg Monastery

Tanzenberg Monastery
Austrian National Library, Vienna (ONB/Wien SG VIII 1 1945.09.07) via Bloomberg
British troops examine a collection of books, mostly looted from Jewish owners, at a monastery that the Nazis planned to use for an elite university in Tanzenberg in 1945.
 
British troops examine a collection of books, mostly looted from Jewish owners, at a monastery that the Nazis planned to use for an elite university in Tanzenberg in 1945. Source: Austrian National Library, Vienna (ONB/Wien SG VIII 1 1945.09.07) via Bloomberg

Enlarge image Arthur Goldschmidt Almanac

Arthur Goldschmidt Almanac

Arthur Goldschmidt Almanac
Duchess Anna Amalia Library, Weimar via Bloomberg
An almanac that once belonged to Arthur Goldschmidt, a Jewish businessman persecuted by the Nazis and a book collector who amassed 40,000 volumes. His grandson recently reached a settlement with the Duchess Anna Amalia Library in Weimar, which will keep the books.
An almanac that once belonged to Arthur Goldschmidt, a Jewish businessman persecuted by the Nazis and a book collector who amassed 40,000 volumes. His grandson recently reached a settlement with the Duchess Anna Amalia Library in Weimar, which will keep the books. Source: Duchess Anna Amalia Library, Weimar via Bloomberg


Enlarge image Duchess Anna Amalia Library

Duchess Anna Amalia Library

Duchess Anna Amalia Library
Duchess Anna Amalia Library, Weimar via Bloomberg
The Rococo hall of the Duchess Anna Amalia Library in Weimar. In February the library returned a collection of almanacs to the heir of Arthur Goldschmidt, a Leipzig businessman persecuted by the Nazis. The Weimar library is one of the leaders among German libraries in returning stolen books.


The Rococo hall of the Duchess Anna Amalia Library in Weimar. In February the library returned a collection of almanacs to the heir of Arthur Goldschmidt, a Leipzig businessman persecuted by the Nazis. The Weimar library is one of the leaders among German libraries in returning stolen books. Source: Duchess Anna Amalia Library, Weimar via Bloomberg

His grandson Tomas Goldschmidt, who was a toddler when Arthur died in poverty in Bolivia in 1951, and had no idea the collection had survived until he was contacted by the London- based Commission for Looted Art in Europe -- 70 years after his grandfather’s escape. The commission traced him at the request of the Duchess Anna Amalia Library in Weimar.

The library has since reached a restitution settlement with Goldschmidt and, just as importantly for him, helped to illuminate an era of family history. He described his first visit to see the almanacs in 2007.
“I was so overwhelmed I couldn’t touch those books, I couldn’t swallow,” he said over coffee in a Berlin cafe. “I felt so proud. It put my family in a new light. I never knew they were so wealthy and so educated. In South America my grandfather had nothing to live on -- they were poor.”

Stolen Volumes

Goldschmidt’s story of expropriation and persecution is echoed in hundreds of thousands of Jewish biographies. The Nazis not only burned books, they stole countless volumes. There is no official estimate for how many Nazi-looted books remain in German libraries. Tracing their owners and returning them is a task that librarians say will take decades.

The Central and Regional Library Berlin estimates it has as many as 250,000 books that are potentially looted. More than 40,000 were seized from the homes of Jews who were deported or murdered. So far, the library has returned 345 books and bookplates to 29 heirs. Peter Proelss, a historian investigating the collection, says he faces “a mountain of books.”

“It would take one person 25 years to look through every book,” Proelss said.
Yet that is not enough, because few books carry visible signs of being looted. Libraries need also to comb through their acquisition records and other archival sources, according to Juergen Weber, the deputy director of the Duchess Anna Amalia Library.

Rococo Hall

In Weimar, Goldschmidt’s almanacs are stored in protective gray jackets in a modern basement depot. Above it, the library’s rococo hall gleams anew in white-and-gold glory after being ravaged by fire in 2004.
Weber said about 40,000 of the library’s books were acquired during Nazi rule. So far 4,000 have been identified as looted, though the actual figure may be triple that or more.

Librarians have also discovered Nazi-looted books acquired in recent years from booksellers, said Michael Knoche, the library’s director.

“There is not much awareness of the problem among antiquarian booksellers,” Knoche said. “We have to examine all new acquisitions too. This task will not be completed in our lifetimes.”

While the restitution of Nazi-looted art frequently makes headlines because of the value of the items, books attract less attention. Goldschmidt’s almanacs -- the Weimar library said it paid more than 100,000 euros ($130,000) to keep them -- are the biggest restitution from a German library so far.

Ghetto Death

Yet the emotional value for families can be vast. Melanie Bruce’s grandfather, Albert Friedlaender, attempted to escape Nazi Germany and follow his son to South Africa in 1941. A professor of chemistry and philosophy, he never managed to flee and died in the ghetto in Lodz. His possessions were lost.
“I got one book back from Berlin,” Bruce, a retired headmistress, said by telephone from Cape Town. “It doesn’t sound like much, but it means a lot to me. My son says he would like to have it one day.”

Most German libraries haven’t even started to search their collections for Nazi-looted books, according to Uwe Hartmann, the head of a German government office which awards funds to museums, libraries and archives for provenance research. While 57 museums have received grants from his office, only 18 libraries have qualified, he said.

“If you think how many thousands of libraries there are in Germany, that suggests there is a lot of work to be done,” Hartmann said.

Helping Libraries

In the case of paintings, lawyers are often willing to work pro bono for claimants because of the value of the objects involved. Yet few individuals or institutions offer libraries assistance. The Commission for Looted Art in Europe, which has helped libraries in Bremen, Berlin, Hamburg, Marburg, Weimar and Nuremberg to track heirs, is an exception.

Anne Webber, co-chair of the commission, tells the story of an Israel-based child survivor of the Holocaust who received three books from a German library that belonged to her mother, who had died in a concentration camp. Her mother had inscribed her name on the flyleaves.

“You can imagine what it meant to receive these books with the mother’s signature, a signature the daughter had never seen, in handwriting she’d never known, of a mother she scarcely remembered,” Webber said by telephone.

Emotional Value

“The Nazis took everything, not just artworks,” she said. “For many families, there is no material evidence of the lost lives. It can take hours and hours and days and days to trace the heirs, and the books themselves may be of little financial value. But every book that is returned has tremendous emotional value.”
The Internet made tracking lost property possible for Peter Schweitzer, a New York rabbi. While planning a trip to Berlin to research family history, he plugged his great-grandfather’s name into Google Inc.’s search engine.

“I came across the listing at the Berlin library,” Schweitzer said. “I would have never known about it otherwise - - it was a total accident.”

So his Berlin schedule last year included a visit to the Central and Regional Library to pick up a periodical about Alpine travel that had belonged to Franz and Clara Fuerstenheim, his great-grandparents.

“Holding it was like reclaiming a piece of their lives,” Schweitzer said. “But how many of the lost books will actually be returned? Very few, I imagine.”

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Bank of Israel Governor Stanley Fischer was born in Zambia & grew up in Suriname, he was a recent 2011 candidate for chief the International Monetary Fund (IMF). He is a former World Bank chief economist and ex-vice chairman at Citigroup, and he has received support from Euromoney magazine while the Wall Street Journal and Washington Post believe he was a top candidate for the IMF.
Fischer recently acted as tour guide to restored ancient synagogue of Suriname now located in Israel, a wonderful cultural landmark & symbol of the Jewish people's remarkable history of triumphs over crises and outright persecutions. Inspiring!


(Image below of Fischer and the ancient Suriname synagogue from businessweek.com)






(Image below sourced from israel-lightontonations.blogspot.com)



A video:

http://www.businessweek.com/videos/2013-01-01/stanley-fischer-plays-museum-tour-guide-in-israel


Here's an article in the news:

Stanley Fischer Takes Israel Donors on Synagogue Tour

 
 
Bank of Israel Governor Stanley Fischer has turned an unlikely tour guide for the day.


He’s standing in the middle of a Tzedek ve-Shalom synagogue from Suriname, reconstructed in Jerusalem.


Enlarge image Tzedek ve-Shalom Synagogue

Tzedek ve-Shalom Synagogue

Tzedek ve-Shalom Synagogue
Elie Posner/Israel Museum via Bloomberg
Israel Museum's reconstructed white Tzedek ve-Shalom synagogue from Suriname. The neoclassic wooden building, painted white, dates back to 1736.
Israel Museum's reconstructed white Tzedek ve-Shalom synagogue from Suriname. The neoclassic wooden building, painted white, dates back to 1736. Photographer: Elie Posner/Israel Museum via Bloomberg

Enlarge image Bank of Israel Governor Stanley Fischer

Bank of Israel Governor Stanley Fischer

Bank of Israel Governor Stanley Fischer
Kiyoshi Ota/Bloomberg
Bank of Israel Governor Stanley Fischer.
Bank of Israel Governor Stanley Fischer. Photographer: Kiyoshi Ota/Bloomberg
Fisher speaks not of economics but of history -- his own and that of the house of worship with a sand-covered floor.

“This is impressive and beautiful and it arouses memories,” Fischer says of the white synagogue, built in 1736 by Jews who fled from Spain and Portugal to Holland during the Inquisition and later settled in Suriname in South America. The sand-covered floor, Fischer adds, is a mystery.

“Every time I see a synagogue, I begin to think about this nation, wherever they go, the first thing they do is build themselves a community center, no matter where,” Fischer says, referring to the Jewish people.

The 69-year-old banker, who was born in Zambia, says that where he grew up there were 147 seats in the synagogue in the nearby city which his family travelled to for holidays, “which gives you an idea how many Jews there were there.”

In 2000, when he took his children for a “roots” visit, there were only five Jews left in the city, and to make up a prayer quorum of 10, the community would trawl the embassies, Fischer says.

Fischer is participating in Israel Museum’s gala as both a guest and guide, along with other prominent figures such as Osem Investment Ltd. (OSEM)’s Chairman Dan Propper and British Ambassador Matthew Gould. It’s a rare opportunity for a personal glimpse into the man who has modernized Israel’s central bank.

Jerusalem Transfer

The rectangular Tzedek ve-Shalom synagogue that Fischer is speaking about ceased to function as a place of worship in the 1990s when the Jewish community of Suriname agreed to let the museum transfer the interior to Jerusalem for restoration.

According to the museum, the community says the sand on the floor symbolizes the Diaspora, just as the people of Israel wandered in the desert sands before reaching the Promised Land, so do exiled Jews living outside Israel today.

A more practical explanation traces the sand’s origin to ancient customs prevalent in houses, churches and synagogues in Holland, where sand served the purpose of keeping floors clean and helping to prevent fire from spreading on the wooden flooring.

“Of all the synagogues I have been in during my life, the synagogue in my hometown, the synagogue where I married my wife, and a long list of others, this is among the most beautiful,” Fischer says.

Friendly Tour

Asked which is more fun, leading monetary policy or a standing in as a docent, Fischer quips: “The nice part of museum tours is that the press is friendly.”

Proceeds from the event, attended by about 500 people, will promote the museums’ educational activities.

“To have Stan Fischer take people through the galleries and to have our guests listen to him connect between his personal story and what you see in the collections in the museum is actually another way of reinforcing what we are all about,” Israel Museum Director James Snyder says. “Our point is that the whole history of material culture is a series of wondrous connections and resonances.”


Israel Museum, Jerusalem 91710. Information: +972-2-670- 8811 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting +972-2-670- 8811 FREE  end_of_the_skype_highlighting, http://www.english.imjnet.org.il/HTMLs/home.aspx