Holocaust Restitution

Nazi-Looted $10 Million Stradivarius Violin Surfaces in France

An expert on looted musical instruments believes a 300-year-old Stradivarius violin, stolen by the Nazis in 1944 from Warsaw, may have resurfaced in France. The instrument, known as the “Lauterbach,” was last seen in France in the early 1990s. This suspicion arose after a concert in Colmar where a violinist played a Stradivarius from the maker’s “golden period” of 1719. While the concert organizer disputes the identification, the expert remains convinced due to the specific characteristics of the violin and its historical provenance.

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German Court Orders Eviction from Home Looted from Jews in 1939

A German court ordered the eviction of an 85-year-old woman and her son from their home, a property forcibly sold by its Jewish owners in 1939 under Nazi duress. This ruling concludes a decade-long legal battle and represents one of the final property restitution cases in Germany, as most such claims have already been processed. The property will be transferred to the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, as no living heirs to the original owners were identified. The court rejected arguments that the current occupants had purchased the property, maintaining that forced sales under the Nazi regime are invalid.

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