Nazi’s son returns art his family looted in Poland

Seeking to mend some of his father’s wrongdoings, a Nazi’s son returned art his father plundered. 

The son of a Nazi official returned three artworks his family looted from the southern Polish city of Krakow during World War II.

Polish officials said Monday they hoped the gesture by Horst von Waechter of Austria would inspire other Nazi descendants.

In the ceremony Sunday in Krakow, von Waechter returned an 18th century map of Poland built into a small table and two historic drawings that his mother, Charlotte von Waechter, appropriated in late 1939,  shortly after her husband, Baron Otto Gustav von Waechter, became governor in the southern Polish city occupied by German and Austrian Nazis. Von Waechter ordered the establishment of the Krakow ghetto in 1941.

Von Wächter was an Austrian lawyer, Nazi politician and SS member with the rank of Gruppenführer. After the war, he evaded Allied authorities for four years. In 1949, Wächter took refuge with pro-Nazi Austrian bishop Alois Hudal in the Vatican, where he died the same year, aged 48.

The handover took place at the office of the Krakow provincial governor after efforts by Polish historian and politician Magdalena Ogorek and the National Museum in Krakow, according to Krzysztof Marcinkiewicz, spokesman for the governor.

Marcinkiewicz said one of the paintings had Charlotte von Waechter’s handwritten pencil inscription saying it came from the Potocki Palace in Krakow, where the Waechters resided during the war.

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Ogorek told The Associated Press she spotted some Poland-related objects at Horst von Waechter’s castle in Austria while she was researching there about his father, who, she said, died in unexplained circumstances in 1949 at the Vatican, while waiting to be smuggled to Argentina to avoid facing justice. Other sources say the elder von Waechter died in Rome, but do not mention the Vatican.

Ogorek said von Waechter returned the objects to Krakow for no compensation.

“He gave a good example to others and we should be happy about this,” Ogorek said.

“I assume that various artworks from Poland can be found in private homes in Germany and in Austria. I am sure of that,” she said.

Poland was severely damaged during World War II, its palaces, museums and libraries bombed and then plundered by the Nazis and by members of the Soviet Red Army from 1939-45. The government continues trying to retrieve looted artworks and the Culture Museum has posted a list of many of them.

Some of the artworks occasionally surface at auctions around the globe, leading Poland to negotiate the terms of their return.

By: AP