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Nazi Law and Art Looting

Leila Amineddoleh had the honor of contributing to Nazi Law: From Nuremberg to Nuremberg. Her chapter was about the ways in which the Nazi Party enacted laws to seize property and loot art, and ways that courts are now grappling with those laws to restitute property. Read more about the book from Bloomsbury Press.

 

About Nazi Law

A distinguished group of scholars from Germany, Israel and right across the United States are brought together in Nazi Law to investigate the ways in which Hitler and the Nazis used the law as a weapon, mainly against the Jews, to establish and progress their master plan for German society.

The book looks at how, after assuming power in 1933, the Nazi Party manipulated the legal system and the constitution in its crusade against Communists, Jews, homosexuals, as well as Jehovah’s Witnesses and other religious and racial minorities, resulting in World War II and the Holocaust. It then goes on to analyse how the law was subsequently used by the opponents of Nazism in the wake of World War Two to punish them in the war crime trials at Nuremberg.

This is a valuable edited collection of interest to all scholars and students interested in Nazi Germany and the Holocaust.

Table of contents

List of Figures
List of Contributors
Foreword, Lorenz Reibling (Boston College, USA)
Acknowledgements

Introduction
John J. Michalczyk (Boston College, USA)

Part I – A Judicial System without Jews and without Justice

1. Politics, Ethics and Natural Law in Early Twentieth Century Germany, 1900-1950, Douglas G. Morris (Federal Defenders NY, USA)
2. Our Enemies Have No Rights: Carl Schmitt and the Two-Tiered System of Justice, Paul Bookbinder (University of Massachusetts, Boston, USA)
3. Defining the Jew: The Origins of the Nuremberg Laws, Oleksandr Kobrynskyy (University of Nuremberg-Erlangen, Germany)
4. Vichy France and the Nuremberg Laws, John Romeiser (University of Tennessee, USA)
5. The Judenräte and the Nazi Racial Policies: Ethical issues in Claude Lanzmann’s Last of the Unjust (2013), Yvonne Kozlovsky Golan (Haifa University, Israel)
6. High Treason in the People’s Court, John J. Michalczyk (Boston College, USA)

Part II – Hippocrates Abandoned by Nazi Doctors

7. Resistance or Complicity: Medical and Religious Responses to Law under the Third Reich, Johnathan Kelly, Erin Miller and Michael A. Grodin (Boston University, USA)
8. Homosexuality and the Law in the Third Reich, Melanie Murphy (Emmanuel College, USA)
9. Physicians, Psychologists, and Lawyers as Torturers: From WWII to Post 9/11, George Annas and Sondra Crosby (Boston University School of Public Health, USA)
10. Nazi Medicine and the Holocaust: Implications for Bioethics and Professionalism Education, Ashley Fernandes (Ohio State University, USA)

Part III – Economic Policies and the Stripping of the Jewish Community

11. The German Plunder and Theft of Jewish Property in the General Government, David M. Crowe (Elon University, USA)
12. Nazi Laws Used to Plunder Art and the Current Legal Tools Used to Unwind Looting, Leila Amineddoleh (Fordham University and New York University, USA)

Part IV – A God Subverted by Nazi Policy

13. The Hereafter versus the Here-and-Now: Catholicism under National Socialism, Kevin Spicer (Stonehill College, USA)
14. Nazi Persecution of German Protestants, Christopher Probst (Maryville University, USA)
15. Jehovah’s Witnesses in the Third Reich, Gerhard Besier (Dresden University, Germany)

Part V – To the Victor Belongs Justice: At Nuremberg and Beyond

16. German Courts in the Maelstrom of Criminal Guilt: Tracing the Rise of Collective Responsibility in Nazi Death Camp Trials, 1963-2016, Michael Bryant (Bryant University, USA)
17. The Devil’s Chemists on Trial: The American Prosecution of I.G. Farben at Nuremberg, Mark Spicka (Shippensburg University, USA)
18. Nazi Experiments, the Nuremberg Code, and the United States, Sandra H. Johnson (St. Louis University School of Law, USA)

Epilogue, John J. Michalczyk (Boston College, USA)

Glossary
Bibliography
Index

Reviews

“This fine collection of essays explores how law came to serve as a tool of destruction in the Third Reich and as a means of moral reconstruction in the postwar years. It offers a timely and valuable intervention in ongoing debates about the capacity of law to deform and reform societies.” –  Lawrence Douglas, James J. Grosfeld Professor of Law, Jurisprudence & Social Thought, Amherst College, USA

“From a wide variety of perspectives, the contributors to this book underline the supreme importance of the rule of justice and the horrifying consequences of its neglect. Well-written and thought-provoking.” –  D.W. de Mildt, editor of Justiz und NS-Verbrechen / Nazi Crimes on Trial, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands

 

Repatriation of Looted Lebanese Antiquities

Today Amineddoleh & Associates was honored to attend the repatriation ceremony for three looted antiquities from the Temple of Eshmun in Sidon, Lebanon. Our founding partner served as the cultural heritage legal expert for the District Attorney’s Office, providing expertise on Lebanon’s cultural heritage laws for the seizure of a marble sculpture formerly on loan to the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

During the ceremony, in which the items were returned to the Lebanese Republic, District Attorney Cyrus Vance addressed the need to protect against looting of art. He discussed the importance of due diligence by museums, auction houses, and collectors. He also acknowledged the work of Matthew Bogdanos, Karin Orenstein, and John Labatt. Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) Agent Erik Rosenblatt noted the link between organized terror and antiquities looting, mentioning the mounting evidence gathered by HSI. The Lebanese General Consul, Majdi Ramadan, expressed his gratitude for today’s repatriations, and the continued cooperation of the District Attorney’s Office and his nation. And finally, Irina Bokova, Director General of UNESCO, briefly spoke about the significance of the repatriated pieces and the importance of enforcing laws against looting. She applauded restitution ceremonies and legal action against looting as they signal the law enforcement agency’s willingness to pursue restitution and punish wrongdoing.
After the statements, Matthew Bogdanos, the attorney responsible for working on these repatriations, fielded questions from reporters. He noted that the antiquities were looted during times of conflict. He also clarified that the Metropolitan Museum of Art was not guilty of any wrongdoing, and that his team will continue working to restitute stolen and looted heritage.
It was an honor for Amineddoleh & Associates to play a role in the return of these items. For more information, please visit http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2017/12/15/ancient-sculptures-returned-to-lebanon/ and http://manhattanda.org/press-release/manhattan-district-attorney%E2%80%99s-office-returns-three-ancient-statues-lebanese-republic

Authenticity and Leonardo

This season’s record-breaking sale of Leonardo da Vinci’s “Salvator Mundi” at Christie’s reveals a great deal about the art market and raises many questions about the fluid nature of authenticity. Our founding partner wrote about the $450 million sale in an editorial in Live Science, available here.

 

 

 

Client Spotlight: Pegasus: The Orchestra

Amineddoleh & Associates’ client, Pegasus: The Orchestra, proudly debuted this past month with two triumphant premiere concerts, and has already been showcased by several news outlets for its musicians’ exceptional talent and the orchestra’s bold mission statement.

The orchestra’s debut concert premiered on October 13, 2017 at the DiMenna Center for Classical Music in New York City to sold out audiences. The evening featured pieces by Debussy, Komitas, Mendelssohn and an original work, Cras Es Noster (Tomorrow, Be Ours) by the Orchestra’s founder, artistic director and principal conductor, Karén Hakobyan. Original paintings by artist Hakob Hakobyan and Michael Aram’s Pegasus sculpture bookended the orchestra’s six musicians during the performance.  The successful event was covered by the Voices of Armenia television program on the NYC Life Channel. Proceeds from the event benefitted the Armenia Fund’s Artsakh Housing Project.

Pegasus also debuted its “Pegasus at Mana” concert series on October 21, 2017 at Mana Contemporary, an industrial warehouse that has been converted into a cutting edge arts complex in Jersey City. The concert was extensively featured by Al Jazeera, which highlighted the orchestra’s more casual, intimate take on classical music performance. Get Classical also recently published an excellent insight into Pegasus: The Orchestra’s mission, members and its partnership with Mana Contemporary.

Inspired by the winged stallion and friend to the muses of Greek myth, Pegasus: The Orchestra was formed in October 2017 to bring together musicians and audiences of diverse backgrounds and cultural heritages by sharing unique, creative programming that mixes famous orchestral pieces with lesser known or novel works, all played by world-renowned musicians. The Orchestra will be sharing it mission at the Mana Contemporary Center and a multitude of venues around the world this year.

See a list of the Orchestra’s upcoming concert dates at the Mana Contemporary here.

We are proud to work with this fantastic group of artists.

Guest Post: Is Israel Still A “Collector’s Paradise”? The Ottoman Laws Until the Present

All image rights owned by Tamar

In light of stories coming out of Israel about the illicit antiquities trade, we are pleased to share a blog post by Alexia V. Ogden, a law student based in the UK.

The Israeli state enacted the Antiquities Law of 1978 to crack down on the illicit trade of antiquities. Given the nature of the Palestine-Israeli conflict, cultural heritage sites across the area have suffered extensive looting. However, dating as far back as the second century, religious pilgrims have long been attracted to the Lands of the Bible and many were encouraged by religious officials to bring back relics (Kersel 2008: 22). The search for antiquities and relics heightened during the time of the Crusades and continued throughout the Ottoman period until the present day. In response to the extensive expropriation of cultural property, the 1978 Antiquities Law declared national ownership over all archaeological material found after its enactment and banned excavation without a permit. Nevertheless, an offshoot of the law was a legalised trade in antiquities; the sale of items already on the shops’ shelves was permitted, so long as these were acquired prior to 1978.[1] This has led some to associate Israel with a “collector’s paradise” (Gopher et al 2002: 191).

During the rule of the Ottoman Empire and until 1884, the discovery of cultural patrimony functioned as follows: one third of the archaeological find went to the private landowners, the second third went to the excavator, and the last part went to the state. This resulted in Europeans buying lands and then excavating them, so that two thirds of the archaeological treasures belonged to them. The 1869 Ottoman regulation, which was re-promulgated in 1872 and comprised of only seven articles, was the first Ottoman decree concerning antiquities.[2] In the face of increasing expropriation of cultural property, the Ottoman Empire tightened regulations through the 1874 Antiquities Law, which replaced the previous law and was published in French and Turkish to ensure global understanding. This law was primarily aimed at foreign excavators and dealers and functioned more as a protection mechanism (Kersel 2008: 24).

A decade later, the Ottoman Law of 1884 established national ownership over all antiquities discovered on Ottoman soil. In addition to securing national patrimony the law also introduced regulations regarding excavation permits and taxes for the sale of antiquities. All artefacts discovered were to be sent to the Imperial Museum in Constantinople to be vetted prior to any decision. Chapter I Article 8 prohibited the export of all antiquities without the explicit consent of the Imperial Museum. However, this pushed the trade underground and established an intricate smuggling network throughout the region, which has persisted till present day (Kersel 2008: 24).

Indeed, practical enforcement of this law was difficult given the size of the empire and the insufficient number of officials to oversee the implementation of these rules. Furthermore, the law was easily circumvented through archaeological diplomacy (Pravilova 2014: 187). Ultimately, ‘state property’ meant that the antiquities were not the property of the state but of the sultan, who was able to trade for political loyalty and support (Ibid.: 187).

Following the fall of the Ottoman Empire, the British Mandate over Palestine was established by the League of Nations. The British were to be the temporary trustees of Palestine and were to ensure the protection of cultural heritage. In 1918, the government of the British Mandate declared the Antiquities Proclamation, which served to publicise the importance of cultural heritage and the need for its protection. This resulted in the archaeological sites acquiring ‘more professional and bureaucratic legal status’ rather than purely religious significance (Kersel 2008: 24). It was in this period that the Palestine Archaeological Museum was established from which the Department of Antiquities (DOA) operated.[3] John Garstang, Director of the DOA, used elements of the 1884 Ottoman Antiquities Law, to produce the 1920 Antiquity Ordinance. Similar to the Ottoman Law of 1884, it established national patrimony over all cultural property found in Palestine. Unlike the Ottoman laws, the legislation was to be overseen locally rather from the metropole. The 1920 Antiquity Ordinance defined antiquity as ‘any object or construction made by human agency earlier than A.D. 1700’ and it retracted some of the more unpopular properties of the Ottoman law, thereby legalising the sale of some material deemed duplicates of objects already in the national repository (Kersel 2008: 26). The result was a legal trade in antiquities, which was controlled by the DOA.

The 1920 Ordinance carefully regulated the trade in antiquities; dealers required a licence and their shops were to be inspected regularly. The Ordinance also introduced permits from the Department and taxes of 10% on exported antiquities. Failure to comply with the regulations was punishable as was ‘wilful or negligent destruction or defacement’ of the cultural heritage (Bentwich 1924: 253-254).  The Ordinance, according to Bentwich, was successful because within four years a record of all archaeological sites and collections was completed and this enabled the foundation of a Palestine archaeological museum – “…so popular is this museum in Jerusalem that it is visited by not less than 1,000 visitors in a day. It has acquired, under the powers of the Legislature, the most notable objects, which have been unearthed in the diggings of the last four years” (Bentwich 1924: 254).

In 1929, another Antiquities Ordinance (No.51) was implemented. It forms the basis of all current legislation in Palestine and Israel and it specified the guidelines for dealing in antiquities. Dealers must apply for a license and provide an inventory list as well as submit to regular inspections by the DOA (Kersel 2008: 26). Following the establishment of Israel in 1948 and the Nakba, the 1929 Ordinance remained the primary legislation in place for cultural heritage protection. Indeed the Law and Administration Ordinance in 1948 reaffirmed the 1929 Ordinance as the primary legislation for the protection of cultural heritage. Similarly, in the West Bank the Jordanian Temporary Law no. 51 (1966) reiterated the same 1929 rules, except that the penalties for noncompliance were more severe. Since the 1967 war, the Israeli state has introduced a series of military orders in the occupied territories, which ultimately repeat the 1929 Ordinance but consign oversight to Israeli officials and not to the Palestinian Authority.[4] However, unlike the Ordinance, which required a permit for each artefact, the military orders require a ‘blanket export license’ (Kersel 2008: 28), which effectively relaxes the legislation. This could potentially provide the antiquities’ dealers in Israel with an ‘unending supply’ of artefacts (Kersel 2008: 29).[5]

The Israeli State formulated the 1978 Antiquity Law, and finally the 1989 Antiquities Authority Law, through which the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) was founded. This established the IAA as “the organization responsible for all the antiquities of the country, including underwater finds. The IAA is authorized to excavate, preserve, conserve and administrate antiquities when necessary.” However, despite these laws, illicitly excavated and acquired items are still being sold legally in the marketplace. This instinctively provides the incentive to loot archaeological sites. The result is that much is looted, and through a complicated process of laundering, it is resold from licensed dealers in Israel. A new law introduced in April 2012 was to eliminate these loopholes and better ‘prevent the importation … of antiquities that were stolen or plundered in other countries’ (IAA 2012). The law requires the dealers to report their inventories through an online programme, removing from the list the items sold so that identification numbers cannot be recycled for looted items. Previously, the recording of inventory was done manually and could thus be easily falsified, allowing dealers to claim that the items were acquired prior to 1978, when in reality they were looted much later. Ultimately, antiquity dealers operating in Israel have previously succeeded in exporting countless artefacts oversees and it is likely that in the near future additional cases such as the Hobby Lobby one will arise and thus the accomplishments of this new legislation remain to be seen.

Time line:
1835 Protection of Antiquities (Egypt)
1874 Antiquities Law (Ottoman Empire)
1884 Antiquities Law (Ottoman Empire)
1918 Antiquities Proclamation (British Mandate)
1920 Antiquities Ordinance (British Mandate)
1929 Antiquities Ordinance No. 51 (British Mandate)
1930 Antiquities Rules (British Mandate)
1966 Temporary Law no. 51 on Antiquities (Jordan)
1973 Military Order No. 462 (Gaza Strip)
1978 Antiquities Law (Israel)
1986 Military Order No. 1166 (The West Bank)
1989 Antiquities Law (Israel)
2012 Legislation on Antiquities Inventories (Israel)

Bibliography

Bentwich, Norman. 1924. “The Antiquities Law of Palestine.” Journal of Comparative Legislation and International Law 6(4): 251-254.

Dunkow, Izabella. 2004. “The Ephesus Excavations 1863-1874, in the Light of the Ottoman Legislation on Antiquities.” Anatolian Studies 54(1): 109-117.

Field, Les, Watkins, Joe & Gnecco, Cristobal. 2016. Challenging the Dichotomy: The Licit and the Illicit in Archaeological and Heritage Discourses. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.

Friedlander, Marty. 2016. “Can You Buy Genuine Antiquities in Israel?” January 14. Haaretz.

Gopher, A. Greenberg, R. Herzog, Z. 2002 Archaeological Public Policy Public Policy in Israel. Perspectives and Practices. New York: Lexington Books.

Israel Antiquities Authority. 2012. “Israel Antiquities Authority Inspectors Seized Two Covers of Ancient Sarcophagi that Previously Contained Egyptian Mummies and were Smuggled into Israel.” March. Israel Antiquities Authority. Available on: http://www.antiquities.org.il/article_eng.aspx?sec_id=25&subj_id=240&id=1925 [Accessed on 1 October 2017]

Kersel, Morag. 2008. “The Trade in Palestinian Antiquities.” Jerusalem Quarterly 33(1): 21-38.

Pravilova, Ekaterina. 2014. A Public EmpireProperty and the Quest for the Common Good in Imperial Russia. New Jersey: Princeton University Press

[1]As Marty Friedlander (2016) warns, this naturally leads to situations in which salesmen assure the potential buyer that the antiquity has ‘been sitting on the shelf of his shop since Menachem Begin entered office’.

[2]Izabella Dunkow (2004) suggests that this interest in antiquities was provoked by the visit of Sultan Abdülaziz to Europe in 1867 and encouraged by his visit to the Abraz Gallery in Vienna. Nevertheless, it seems likely that these regulations were a direct response to the expropriation of cultural property of national importance, for example, amongst other items, the Pergamon Altar. Ekaterina Pravilova (2014) argues that the first Ottoman law on the protection of antiquities occurred in Egypt (1835) and it prohibited the export of archaeological finds and made the protection of cultural heritage and monuments a royal obligation. This arose because the Ottoman military commander Muhammad Ali Pasha, the self-declared Khedive (viceroy) of Egypt in 1805 was using cultural heritage as foreign currency. He gave antiquities as gifts so that he was able to secure favourable relations with Europe. The Khedive was not officially recognised by the Ottoman Empire until 1867.

[3]The Palestine Archaeological Museum was seized by Israel following the Six Day War (1967) and was renamed the Rockefeller Museum. It remains under the management of the Israel Museum, despite its location in East Jerusalem.

[4]For example: 1973 Military Order No. 463 in Gaza forbade the exportation of antiquities from Gaza unless explicitly permitted by the director of the DOA and 1986 Military order No. 1166, ultimately repeated the legislation of the 1929 Ordinance but authorised an Israeli antiquities staff officer for the West Bank, who would oversee the implementation of the regulations and whose approval was required to export antiquities from the region.

[5]This ambiguity was later corrected in 2002 Chapter 4 Section 20 which states that: (a) A person may not bring into Israel an antiquity from the region, unless he has received approval to do so from the Director; (b) In this paragraph, “region” includes: Judea and Samaria [The West Bank] and the Gaza Strip.