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No one knows exactly how many objects the Nazis looted and how many may still be missing. The Claims Conference says about 650,000 art objects were taken, and thousands of items are still lost. But the true number may never be known because of lack of documentation, the passage of time and the absence of a central arbitration body. Some museum organizations have argued in recent years that most looted art has been identified as researchers focus on the provenance of art objects. The database includes only a slice of the records generated by the Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg, an undertaking of Third Reich ideologue Alfred Rosenberg to seize archives, books, art, Judaica, home furnishings and other objects from Jewish families, bookstores and collections. Records of the looting were disbursed to nearly a dozen countries after the war. The database is focused on ERR spoils shipped to a prewar museum near the Louvre, where they were often catalogued and sold back to the market, destroyed or integrated into the lavish private collections of top Nazi officials
-- including the military chief Hermann Goering. Julius Berman, the chairman of the Claims Conference, said organizing Nazi art-looting records was a key step to righting an injustice. "It is now the responsibility of museums, art dealers and auction houses to check their holdings against these records to determine whether they might be in possession of art stolen from Holocaust victims," he said. ___ Online: Database of Art Objects at the Jeu de Paume:
http://www.errproject.org/jeudepaume/
[Associated
Press;
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