[MSN] Israeli courts will not be able to adjudicate claims of ownership of works of art from abroad brought to Israel for exhibit, according to the terms of a bill to be submitted to the Knesset for its second and third readings.
Museum Security Network Mailinglist
msn-list at te.verweg.com
Fri Jan 12 06:52:11 CET 2007
Bill aims to prevent Israelis from claiming Nazi-looted art
By Amiram Barkat
Israeli courts will not be able to adjudicate claims of ownership of works
of art from abroad brought to Israel for exhibit, according to the terms of
a bill to be submitted to the Knesset for its second and third readings. The
proposed law is controversial, because it would make it difficult for
potential heirs to art looted in the Holocaust to sue for ownership in
Israel.
The bill was drafted at the behest of the French government, which wants to
mount an exhibition in the Israel Museum this summer of art stolen by the
Nazis.
During talks between the Israel Museum and the French national authority for
museums, it was agreed that some 50 works of art whose owners are unknown
would go on display in Israel from museum collections in France.
The exhibition has already been put off for a number of years, due to French
concerns that families of Holocaust victims will sue for ownership of the
art in Israeli courts.
In 2003, the French understood from then-supreme court president Aharon
Barak that the arrangement then in force, by which Israel's culture minister
could grant a certificate of immunity to a work of art, was not binding in
Israeli courts. They then informed Israel that they would agree to nothing
less than legislation.
The bill, which would empower the justice minister to issue an order
preventing the courts from hearing a case involving artwork brought to
Israel for an exhibit, will come before the house within about two weeks. MK
Michael Melchior (Labor), chairman of the Knesset Education Committee, which
is now debating the bill, said it involves a "moral problem of the first
degree," although he predicted that the law would pass with some changes.
The committee's legal counsel, Merav Israeli, said the law infringes on a
fundamental right of Israeli citizens.
The Israel Museum responded that it opposed the attempt to link the law and
the Holocaust. Museum director James Snyder said such laws have been passed
in all Western countries in response to attempts to demand restitution of
archaeological items taken to the West during the period of colonialism.
http://www.haaretz.com/
More information about the MSN-list
mailing list