Rediscovered and Repatriated: UCLA Library’s Return of Nazi-Looted BooksMain MenuIntroductionHistorical Context: Nazi Ideology and World War IIHistorical Context: Jews in PragueJewish Museum in PragueLibrary of the Jewish Museum in PragueThe Books: RediscoveryThe Books: Prague to Los AngelesThe Books: Journey HomeTimelineBibliographyCurators and Collaborators
Rydell 2017
12022-05-08T12:47:02-07:00Shannon Tanhayi Ahari9acf9da5ec89ddee5b91d49defd5a86373ce8e7e399842plain2022-05-08T12:48:09-07:00Shannon Tanhayi Ahari9acf9da5ec89ddee5b91d49defd5a86373ce8e7eRydell, Anders. The Book Thieves: The Nazi Looting of Europe’s Libraries and the Race to Return a Literary Inheritance. Translated by Henning Koch. New York, N.Y.: Viking, 2017.
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1media/IMG_2831.JPGmedia/IMG_2831.JPG2022-02-09T14:18:22-08:00Introduction131plain2022-05-08T12:47:36-07:00 From the early 1930s to the end of World War II in 1945, the Nazi Party looted millions of books from libraries, universities, and other public and private collections across Europe. As part of their planned annihilation of Jewish people and culture, many books were destroyed in massive public bonfires. Others were stockpiled for future study and intended as proof of the inferiority of the “un-German” (1). Today, many libraries and museums are attempting to rebuild what remains of their ransacked collections.
This exhibit presents the story of six books. Looted by Nazis during World War II and rediscovered decades later at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), we contextualize the books’ histories, investigate their international journey from Europe to the United States, and describe UCLA Library’s process for returning the books to their rightful stewards at the Jewish Museum in Prague, Czech Republic.
1media/640px-1944_Chapin_Map_of_Germany_during_World_War_II_for_TIME_Magazine-1.jpg2022-04-28T11:46:20-07:00Historical Context: Nazi Ideology and World War II54plain2022-05-09T15:18:43-07:00The Nazi Party, or the National Socialist German Workers Party, formed in 1919 after Germany’s defeat in World War I (WWI). Led by dictator Adolf Hitler, the Nazis rose to power in 1933 and imposed an authoritarian regime fueled by racist ideologies, extreme nationalism, and dissatisfaction with the Treaty of Versailles. The Treaty, which ended WWI, demanded severe reparations from Germany and led to an economic depression that further destabilized the country. Hitler scapegoated Jews and others for the socioeconomic decline. He called for the creation of a new order led by the "Aryan race,” which would exclude and ultimately eradicate other “subhuman races”—especially Jews—to enable a stronger and more united Germany (2). By the mid-1930s, Nazi discrimination, particularly against German Jews, had escalated. Under the Nuremberg Race Laws of 1935, Jews were denied citizenship and banned from marrying someone of the Aryan race. These laws, among others that followed, legalized persecution and sanctioned other antisemitic acts, including the theft and destruction of Jewish property (3).
The first book burnings occurred on May 10, 1933. University student groups and Nazi officials across Germany hosted public bonfires to destroy works of “un-German” ideas. In the years to come, Nazis confiscated countless Jewish books, films, religious artifacts, art, and music from private homes, public museums, Jewish organizations, and universities. The purpose behind the plunder was not merely to destroy. In 1936, the Forschungsabteilung Judenfrage (Research Department for the Jewish Question) was formed. By collecting, dissecting, and manipulating the beliefs, literature, and culture of their enemies, researchers studying “the Jewish Question” aimed to legitimize the regime’s racist policies (4). On September 1, 1939, Germany invaded Poland, and World War II began. The world’s deadliest military conflict involved more than thirty countries and lasted for six years until the Allied Powers defeated Germany and Japan, leading to the end of the war on September 2, 1945. By then the Nazis had murdered upwards of six million Jews. In the aftermath, the Allies organized efforts to find looted materials (5). These efforts continue today, as many museums and libraries strive to recover displaced books and other cultural heritage items. The Jewish Museum in Prague (JMP), which will be discussed in the next few sections, is one such example.