January 5th, 2010 | 4:41 pm

Today, The Monuments Men Year-End Newsletter for 2009 was released to the general public. Inside this newsletter, you can read about the various creative content we have produce, our ongoing engagement with the public through the media to bring much need attention to the Monuments Men, the various honors bestowed upon the Monuments Men Foundation, and all the incredible memories bringing this story to life. Many thanks to all that have worked on this project through the years.
Please take a minute to read the The Monuments Men Year-End Newsletter.
If you would like to sign up for future newsletters, please click here (fill out form on the right side to submit).
Tags: Alabama Booksmit, America, Art, Beyond the Dreams of Avarice, Gemaldegalerie Linz, Gemaldegalerie Linz Album XIII, Goering, History, Hitler, Hitler Art Book, Metroplitan Museum of Art, Monuments Men, Monuments Men Book, Morning Joe, National Archives, Nazi, President George Bush, Rape of Europa, Rescuing Da Vinci, Senator Hillary Clinton, The Greatest Theft in History, Tom Brockaw, Tom Hanks, United States, Veterans, World War II, World War II Museum
Posted in Amazing Stories, Art, Beyond the Dreams of Avarice, Congressional Resolution, Finding the Monuments Men, General, History, Identifying Unknown Soldiers in Our Photos, Interviews, Laurel Publishing, Media, Military, Missing Works of Art and Other Property, Monuments Men, Monuments Men Book, Monuments Men Foundation, Robert Edsel, The Rape of Europa, Travel and Museum Hints, World War II
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October 6th, 2009 | 5:10 pm

German Ambassador Klaus Scharioth accepts two books returned by an American soldier who took them from a salt mine during World War II. (Photo Courtesy of Robert M. Edsel Collection.)
Today I attended a ceremony at the National Archives in Washington, D.C. to participate in the return of 2 books to Germany that were taken by a U.S. soldier who discovered them in a German salt mine where they had been placed for safekeeping by German cultural officials. This soldier contacted the Monuments Men Foundation more than two years ago seeking information on the books and their value. We worked diligently over the next 13 months to identify them and the precise mine from which they had been removed. One book was written in Latin; the other in German. They were both more than 400 years old. Accepting both books on behalf of a grateful nation was German Ambassador Klaus Scharioth.
These books are but 2 of hundreds of thousands of books and works of art still missing from the war, some of which were stolen by the Nazis but others “taken”—”liberated”—and in some cases stolen by Allied troops of all sides. Oftentimes these cases had innocent beginnings: a soldier found something during his tour and took it as a souvenir of his wartime experience. Where such cases involve cultural items–works of art, library books, documents, they were taken against direct orders from Generals Eisenhower and Bradley, the latter of whom issued on numerous occasions field wide orders to his troops: “We are a conquering Army, not a pillaging one”. Still, it happened.
One of the greatest obstacles the Monuments Men Foundation frequently must overcome is to explain that items such as these books, or other important documents, are not only NOT SELLABLE, but to do even attempt to do so places the person in possession of them at great risk of prosecution, especially if moving them across state lines. My dad was a veteran: I understand as well as anyone who wasn’t there doing the fighting why items were sometimes taken and the emotional attachment the person who possesses it has to the object. At the same time, I know how important it is to victims of the Nazis murderous theft to have their items returned to them. Oftentimes these missing documents facilitate those returns.

(Photo Courtesy of AP Photo/ Haraz N. Ghanbari.)
I have always succeeded in explaining to the person in possession of such objects how they can demonstrate a different type of valor than that required of the battlefield by working with the Monuments Men Foundation to return these objects. The Foundation does not seek to judge anyone; our focus is to facilitate doing the right thing in the most transparent way possible although we do handle some cases on an anonymous basis depending on circumstances.
No one reveres veterans more than I do. I believe we can never fully repay our debt to anyone who has served in combat to preserve the ideals and freedom we hold so dear. But two Monuments Men died in combat, and more than 60 others risked their lives, trying to preserve the cultural belongings of ALL people—including Germans—against destruction and theft by anyone. They believed that taking or “liberating” cultural belongings made our side no better than those we were trying so desperately to defeat. And for that reason, I openly plea with anyone in the possession of such objects, whether living veterans, their heirs, or someone who has otherwise come into the possession of such objects to contact the Monuments Men Foundation (www.monumentsmenfoundation.org) and work with us to return these important items. It’s the right thing to do.
Tags: Art Returned, Books, General Eisenhower, General Patton, German Cultural Officials, Hitler, Liberated, Monuments Men, Monuments Men Foundation, National Archives
Posted in Amazing Stories
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August 13th, 2009 | 9:42 am

Chief Archivist of the United States, Professor Allen Weinstein and Robert M. Edsel standing before one of the two "Hitler Albums" (Photo Courtesy of Robert M. Edsel Collection)
Hundreds of thousand of works of art and millions of cultural treasures, including library books, manuscripts, and religious objects, stolen by Hitler and the Nazis, or taken by others during World War ll, remain missing. The collective value of these items is well into the billions of dollars! Does anyone really believe they were all destroyed during the war?
Two years ago we located the Hitler Albums, two albums filled with photographs of paintings stolen by the Nazis from French collectors, many of whom were Jewish, that were presented to Adolph Hitler for his enjoyment and selection of the best works for his Führermuseum in Linz. These albums were found in his home – the Berghof – in Berchtesgaden by an American soldier and taken as war booty. They had been sitting in the attic of his home ever since.
Years later they surfaced when a family member contacted us seeking assistance with determining what they were and their importance. In time they expressed a desire for us to put them to their best use. We – me personally and the Monuments Men Foundation for the Preservation of Art – subsequently donated them to the National Archives at a ceremony in Washington in 2007. Allen Weinstein, Chief Archivist of the United States, hailed their discovery as “the most significant find related to Hitler’s premeditated theft of art and other cultural treasures to be found since the Nuremberg trials.”
I believe there are many more such albums that will surface in the coming years along with missing paintings, drawings, books, and tens of thousands of other items displaced by the war or stolen during those years. As the World War II generation passes, their belongings will be distributed to family members and, in many cases, sold. During this sorting and identification process, many missing items from the war will surface.
The internet is also proving invaluable in helping both claimants and others seeking to find such stolen items recover their belongings. Still, there is much to be done, by certain governments, museums, collectors, even the public at large. It begins, however, with a far greater public awareness of the volume and importance of what is missing from World War II.
Everyone can participate! Everyone can help us write the final chapter to this amazing story, the final chapter to this part of World War II, and in so doing, complete the mission of the Monuments Men.
To learn more about how you can help please contact me.
Tags: Allied Heroes, Art, Education, Europe, France, Germany, History, Hitler, Missing, Monuments Men, National Archives, Nazi Thieves, Stolen, United States, Website, World War II
Posted in Amazing Stories, Art, Finding the Monuments Men, Missing Works of Art and Other Property, Monuments Men
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