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Politics15:31 · 19m ago

Italy Advances Law to Return Art Looted During the Holocaust

Arutz ShevaRight
Translated & summarized from Arutz Sheva by baba
The story · English

Italy is set to join other European countries by establishing an official mechanism to return artworks and cultural assets confiscated or looted during the Holocaust. This marks a significant policy shift, as Italy previously lacked a formal legal process for restitution, forcing families of victims of fascist and Nazi regimes to face complex legal obstacles when seeking to reclaim their original property.

The parliamentary initiative was recently introduced to the Culture, Science, and Education Committee of the Italian Chamber of Deputies, chaired by Federico Mollicone, a senior member of the ruling party. The proposed law would grant the government full authority to create a special system responsible for locating and returning cultural and artistic assets lost, looted, or confiscated due to anti-Semitic persecutions.

The law is expected to apply to items seized under Italy's 1938 racial laws as well as those looted since the Nazi party's rise to power in Germany in 1933. The World Jewish Restitution Organization, which actively supported the legislative process, expressed strong approval. Its president, Gideon Taylor, stated, "We welcome this initiative and believe the bill offers a historic opportunity to finally achieve justice for victims of Nazi and fascist persecutions and their heirs."

Read the original at Arutz Sheva
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