Thieves grab Nazi memorabilia in museum heists, puzzling police
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, November 22, 2024


Thieves grab Nazi memorabilia in museum heists, puzzling police
An image provided by Eyewitness Museum, the aftermath of an Aug. 4 robbery at the Eyewitness War Museum in Beek, Netherlands. Thieves stole $1.5 million worth of World War II memorabilia, the museum’s director said, including rare Nazi uniforms. Eyewitness Museum via The New York Times.

by Alex Marshall



NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- It was 2 a.m. on a Tuesday when the raid began at the Eyewitness War Museum in the town of Beek, the Netherlands.

First, a group of thieves teased open the museum’s front gate.

“You can see it on our cameras,” said Wim Seelen, the museum’s director.

But then, they disappeared.

An hour later, the burglars returned in several estate cars. In a scene reminiscent of a heist movie, they spread out tires across the highway that runs past the museum to create a roadblock and parked a fake police car beside it, so it looked official.

Over the next five minutes, the group — maybe 12 people in total, Seelen said — battered down the museum’s front door, broke display cabinets and took what they’d come for: nine mannequins wearing rare Nazi uniforms. The outfits included one worn by Hitler’s personal chef and another by a high-ranking member of the SS.

The robbers took other items of World War II memorabilia, Seelen said, with the haul worth about $1.5 million in total.

“It was done with military precision,” he added.

The museum’s alarms went off, but the police — held up by the roadblock — arrived too late to catch anyone.

“Of course, I’m terrified it will happen again,” Seelen said.

The Aug. 4 raid in Beek was only the most dramatic in a string of recent robberies from World War II museums in Europe, and the burglaries are spreading panic among similar institutions.

Since March, four museums in the Netherlands and Denmark have been broken into, and memorabilia, including Nazi uniforms, has been stolen. The most recent raid took place Nov. 3, when robbers broke through a window at the German Museum North Schleswig, in southern Denmark, and made off with three mannequins in Nazi outfits.

Administrators from all four of the burglarized institutions said they believed the thieves were acting on the orders of collectors looking to get their hands on rare Nazi memorabilia. But they were uncertain whether the robberies were carried out by the same group or were simply part of a worrying trend.

Officers of the Dutch and Danish police said in telephone interviews that they had no suspects in any of the robberies but were looking for patterns.

Richard Bronswijk of the Dutch police’s art crime unit said his team had two theories: that wealthy collectors in Russia or Eastern Europe had ordered the robberies, or that they were undertaken by supporters of the far right. The second theory was less likely, he added, “as those guys don’t have much money and like to buy replicas.”

The raid at the Eyewitness War Museum was incredibly professional, he said.




“They were really like ‘Ocean’s Twelve,’ ” he added, referring to the Hollywood heist movie.

The Netherlands and Denmark, which were both occupied by Nazi Germany during World War II, have numerous small, private and state-funded museums devoted to the history of that conflict. Many have glass display cases filled with memorabilia including weapons, and dioramas depicting scenes from the war, with mannequins in original uniforms. There are around 100 in the Netherlands alone, Seelen estimated.

Many Dutch museums have taken rare items off display or improved their security systems in response to the recent robberies. The Arnhem War Museum has installed anti-tank barriers at its entrance, “so people can’t come with a big truck,” said Marina Moens, one of its owners.

Concern is growing in Denmark, too.

“I’m sure every museum’s taking precautions,” said Henrik Skov Kristensen, director of the Froslev Camp Museum. “But if someone’s determined to do something like this, they will.”

Kristensen’s museum, set in a former prison camp in Denmark, was robbed in March. The burglars also took SS uniforms. After finding no leads, Danish police closed the investigation in April, he said.

Giel van Wassenhove, a Belgian dealer in military memorabilia, said the value of Nazi items had been rising for years.

“The stuff that’s being stolen is all very desirable, and the prices are going crazy,” he said. “Everyone knows if it’s got a Nazi emblem on it, its price is high.”

An SS uniform could fetch anywhere from $3,500 to $35,000, he said.

In the two Dutch robberies, thieves stole a special rifle, the “FG 42,” which was used by Nazi paratroopers, van Wassenhove said. A decade ago, he said, that gun was worth about $60,000; today, it is worth more than $175,000.

But van Wassenhove played down suggestions that a boom in far-right collectors was driving the soaring prices. Most buyers were investors simply chasing a profit, he said.

Many museums might not realize the value of objects in their collections, van Wassenhove added.

Those that do are not taking any chances: Moens of the Arnhem War Museum said that, in addition to installing anti-tank barriers, the museum had taken all its Nazi uniforms off display. In October, the War Museum Overloon returned two rare books it had borrowed from an Amsterdam institute, including a “Book of the Dead” listing 1,500 victims of the Holocaust at Auschwitz. Janneke Kennis, a spokeswoman for the museum, said the museum feared the books could be targeted by thieves.

Seelen said the raid at the Eyewitness Museum had been so devastating that, for weeks afterward, he considered closing down. He said he knew he would never see the items again.

But World War II museums are not just homes for memorabilia, he said: They play an important educational role.

“The Second World War was a period of so much suffering that we have to tell the story of it, to make sure it never ever happens again,” he said. “I’m not going to quit telling that story.”

© 2020 The New York Times Company










Today's News

November 14, 2020

Lucy Lacoste Gallery opens an exhibition of works by Isezaki Jun and Isezaki Koichiro

A new museum to bring the Benin Bronzes home

John Waters donates art to Baltimore Museum

Thieves grab Nazi memorabilia in museum heists, puzzling police

'Know My Name: Australian Women Artists 1900 to Now' opens at the National Gallery of Australia

Christie's Paris presents 'The Exceptional Sale & The Collector : Le Goût Français'

Exhibition at Kunsthaus Zurich focuses on Romanticism

Christie's announces Monet / Richter private selling exhibition

Aldo Tambellini, avant-garde filmmaker and video artist, dies at 90

Exhibition presents a selection of more than 60 prints from the Dutch Golden Age

Stonehenge road tunnel approved despite protests

"Rubber Pencil Devil" by Alex Da Corte opens at Prada Rong Zhai in Shanghai

Christie's Latin American Art sale achieves $8.9M

Hope for Bollywood stars' dilapidated homes in Pakistan

Bronx Museum of the Arts announces new Executive Director

New Dean for the Courtauld Institute of Art

Sotheby's to offer rare opportunity to acquire the complete Black Bowmore whisky collection

Sculpture by the Sea unveils a major artwork as a beacon of hope

A famous Santa and Rudolph are heading to auction

National Gallery of Canada Foundation announces new CEO

Heritage Auctions offers Norman Rockwell's original study for 1963 portrait of President John Kennedy

MOCA Toronto completes $25 million capital campaign with major contribution

Jil Weinstock named Director of Baxter St at CCNY

Lynn Kellogg, who found the spotlight in 'Hair,' dies at 77

Have A Look At Some High Quality Truck Covers That Will Work Wonders For Your Truck

BetSofa Casino: Everything You Want to Learn about Slots

How can international students get a car loan in Australia?

5 Casinos That Feature the Best Art Collections

Benefits Of CBD Isolate Versus Other Forms Of CBD

Should I choose an open bar or a host bar?

3 Wildflowers Every Gardener Would Love In Their Garden

How Art Eases Your Mind: 4 Proven Facts From Therapists

How to Start a Blog From Scratch and Turn it Into a Profitable Business




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful