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Nazi Looting: The Plunder of Dutch Jewry during the Second World War

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The Nazi looting machine was notoriously efficient during the Second World War. In the Netherlands, 8.5 million citizens suffered losses estimated at 3.6 billion guilders. Approximately one-third of these losses were borne by Jews, who comprised only 1.6% of the total population. In todays terms, the German occupiers stripped the Jewish population of assets worth $7 billion.Nazi Looting offers a comprehensive history of the Dutch experience and demonstrates how reputable indigenous institutions acted as willing collaborators. Beginning with a survey of international law and various definitions of 'looting', the author shows how the Germans systematically robbed Dutch Jewry through a variety of means that gave the outward appearance of honest trading. Forced to sell under duress and at unreasonably low prices, few dared refuse the German on the doorstep when threatened with prison or incarceration in a camp.The plundering was total and systematic. In May 1940, a team of highly trained art historians, linguists, musicologists and literary experts arrived immediately behind the victorious German troops to catalogue the vast collections for Hitler. From 1941, Jews were compelled to deposit all their money into a bank called Lippmann, Rosenthal Co. The name of the bank itself was a cynical ploy since it was taken from a respected, Jewish-owned Amsterdam bank and presented as a new branch. This bank, however, simply channelled money into the Third Reich with the help of the Amsterdam Stock Exchange, insurance brokers and other well-established Dutch banks. Once the Jews were deported, their houses were emptied and the contents used to re-furnish bombed out areas of the Reich. In common with many other formerly Nazi-occupied countries in Europe, the Netherlands has been unable to retrieve many of its pre-war assets. More than fifty years after the wars end, 20% of its most important pre-war museum exhibits and approximately 80% of the less important works remain untrace

288 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1999

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About the author

Gerard Aalders

26 books11 followers
Aalders voltooide twee studies aan de Universiteit van Amsterdam (geschiedenis en scandinavistiek) en promoveerde in 1989 op Swedish neutrality and the Cold War, waarin hij beschrijft waarom Zweden zich – in tegenstelling tot zijn Scandinavische buurlanden – niet bij de NAVO aansloot.
Hij werkte van 1993 tot 2011 als onderzoeker bij het Nederlands Instituut voor Oorlogsdocumentatie (NIOD). Hij schreef in die tijd een trilogie over de nazi-roof op Nederland (Roof, Berooid en Eksters), en verder boeken en artikelen over inlichtingen- en veiligheidsdiensten, geheime economische collaboratie, de Bilderbergconferenties, kartels, Koude Oorlog, WikiLeaks en enkele monografieën over Prins Bernhard. Aalders staat bekend als een fervent criticus van de prins. Als overtuigd republikein levert hij regelmatig kritiek op de monarchie.

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