Politics12:26 · 1h ago

Italy Begins Legislation to Return Art Looted During the Holocaust

Kan NewsPublic
Translated & summarized from Kan News by baba
The story · English

Italy has initiated legislation to establish a formal process for returning artworks and cultural assets looted during the Holocaust. Unlike other European countries, Italy lacked a structured restitution framework, causing families of Nazi and fascist persecution victims to face numerous legal obstacles. The bill was recently introduced to the Italian Chamber of Deputies' Committee on Culture, Science, and Education. It empowers the Italian government to create a mechanism for the restitution of art and cultural property confiscated or lost due to anti-Semitic persecutions under the fascist racial laws starting in 1938 and the Nazi regime from 1933 onward.

Federico Mollicone, a senior member of the ruling party, chairs the parliamentary culture committee overseeing the bill. Gidon Taylor, president of the World Jewish Restitution Organization (WJRO), which helped promote the legislation, praised it as a historic opportunity to finally deliver justice to victims and their heirs. This development follows a recent precedent in Switzerland, where authorities decided to open the archive of Nazi war criminal Josef Mengele to the public after years of restricted access, citing intelligence protection concerns. Parliamentary appeals led to the decision to allow public review of the documents under specific conditions.

In related news, a synagogue in Rome was vandalized with graffiti reading "Free Palestine," and reports indicate a growing focus in Holocaust remembrance on the Righteous Among the Nations, those who saved Jews during the genocide.

Read the original at Kan News
Open the live terminal