France to return Nazi-looted painting to rightful Jewish heirs March 16, 2021An oil painting by Gustav Klimt returned to the grandchildren of the holocaust victim Nora Stiasny from whom it was stolen by the Nazis. (Alain Jocard/Pool Photo via AP)Alain Jocard/Pool Photo via APFrance to return Nazi-looted painting to rightful Jewish heirs Tweet WhatsApp Email https://worldisraelnews.com/france-to-return-nazi-looted-klimt-to-rightful-jewish-heirs/ Email Print The oil work will be returned to the family of Nora Stiasny, a Holocaust victim from whom it was stolen via a forced sale in August 1938.By Associated PressThe French government announced Monday that it will return a Nazi-looted Gustav Klimt landscape painting to its rightful owners more than 80 years after it was stolen from a Jewish family in Austria in 1938.The colorful 1905 oil work by the Austrian symbolist painter titled “Rosebushes under the Trees” has been hanging in Paris’ Musee d’Orsay museum for decades.French Culture Minister Roselyne Bachelot-Narquin told a Paris news conference that “the decision to return a major work from the public collections illustrates our commitment to the duty of justice and reparation vis-à-vis plundered families.” The oil work will be returned to the family of Nora Stiasny, a Holocaust victim who was dispossessed during a forced sale in August 1938. Bachelot-Narquin said that French authorities hadn’t initially identified the painting as being stolen by the Nazis, and its provenance only recently came to light after French government-led investigations on the issue.“It is in recent years that the true origin of the painting has been established,” she said, adding that it was “the only Gustav Klimt painting owned by France.”Read 'Dangerous'- Israel warns fans to avoid Israel-France soccer game“‘Rosebushes under the Trees’ is a testament to the lives that a criminal will has stubbornly sought to eliminate.”Thousands of artworks looted by the Nazis across Europe wound up in French museums after the Allies defeated Nazi Germany in 1945.Though many have been returned, French authorities have stepped up efforts in recent years to find homes for the scores of hanging heirlooms that remain unclaimed. FranceGustav KlimtNazi-looted art