Hungarian Gold Train
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The Hungarian Gold Train was the case of a Nazi-operated train during World War II that carried stolen valuables, mostly Hungarian Jewish persons' property, from Hungary towards Berlin in 1944. After seizure of the train by American forces, almost none of the valuables were returned to Hungary or their rightful owners or their surviving family members.[1][2]
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[edit] Background
After the German invasion of Hungary in 1944, the fascist government collaborated with their Nazi occupiers in forcing the Jewish citizens of Hungary, estimated at around 800,000, to hand over all of their valuables to government officials. This included gems, golden jewelry, wedding rings and anything else considered of high monetary value. After they handed over their property, everything was put into individual bags and boxes which identified the owners and receipts were issued. After a majority of the Hungarian Jews were shipped to concentration camps, mostly to Auschwitz where most were murdered, Hungarian authorities re-sorted all the confiscated valuables into content categories. By that time it was all but impossible to identify proper ownership of any of the valuables.[1]
[edit] The "Gold Train"
In late 1944, the Soviet Army was advancing on the Hungarian capital of Budapest. A government official appointed by the Schutzstaffel (SS) named Árpád Toldi (sometimes spelled Arpad Toldy) concocted a plan to evacuate much of the Jewish loot out of Hungary. Toldi ordered large amounts of the loot onto a 42 car freight train that was to head for Germany.
According to various reports about the train, the contents included gold, gold jewelry, gems, diamonds, pearls, watches, about 200 paintings, Persian and Oriental rugs, silverware, chinaware, furniture, fine clothing, linens, porcelains, cameras, stamp-collections and currency (mostly US dollars and Swiss francs). Jewish organizations and the Hungarian government estimated the total value of the train's contents at $350 million in 1945[2] or almost $4 billion in 2007 adjusted for inflation.[3] Other estimates of the contents' 1945 worth are from $50 million to $120 million [4] or $570 million to $1.7 billion in 2007 adjusted for inflation.[3]
As the train meandered throughout Hungary and Austria, it stopped occasionally to transfer a great amount of the gold to trucks. The fate of the gold on those trucks remains unknown.
In Austria, the train was eventually seized by Allied troops, first by the French Army and then finally by the United States Army near the town of Werfen in May, 1945.
[edit] Fate of valuables from the "Gold Train"
Official United States asset restitution policy agreed upon at the 1946 Final Act of Paris Reparation Conference and by the Five-Power Agreement for Non-Repatriable Victims of Germany was to sell ownerless property for the benefit of non-repatriable refugees. These agreements were the basis of the creating of the Preparatory Committee for the International Refugee Organization (IRO). [1]
The US had a different policy towards works of art. Consistent with long-standing international agreements, the US has a policy of restitution of "looted works of art and cultural material will be restituted to the governments of the countries from which they were taken."[1]
Shortly after the US army seizure of the train, a majority of the assets were transferred to a Military Government Warehouse in Salzburg. The paintings, however, were stored in a Salzburg Residenz. As the ownership of the valuables was impossible to identify, the official US position, as stipulated by United States Army Chief of Staff George C. Marshall, the belongings were to be given to refugee aid organizations which was consistent with international restitution agreements.[1]
However, the Central Board of Jews in Hungary, an organization representing Jewish interests in Hungary, and the new government of Hungary were aware of the American seizure of the train and lobbied extensively, and sometimes passionately, for the return of all of the train's contents to Hungary where they could be sorted with the effort to return them to their rightful owners or family members. The US Government continuously ignored the Hungarian pleas.[1]
A majority of the assets from the train were either sold through Army exchange stores in Europe in 1946 or auctioned off in New York City in 1948 with the proceeds going to the IRO. According to The New York Times the auctions receipts totaled $152,850.61, or approximately $1.3 million in 2007 adjusted for inflation.[3] Clothing that was allocated for Army exchange store sales that were considered of lesser value were turned over to a Division chaplain for distribution "to needy DPs" (displaced persons).[1]
Some of the property from the train did in fact end up in the possession of high ranking US Army officers that were stationed in Central Europe to oversee post-war and Marshall Plan reconstruction efforts. By requisition order of Major General Harry J. Collins, Commander of the 42nd Infantry Division (the famed "Rainbow" Division), many of the items from the train were used to furnish his home. Other property furnished the homes and offices of other US military officers like that of Brigadier General Henning Linden and General Edgar E. Hume. The property included chinaware, silverware, glassware, rugs and table and bedding linens.[1]
Of the approximate 200 paintings seized on the train, their ultimate fate is unknown. As they were deemed "cultural assets," under official US restitution policy, they would have been returned to their country of origin. In the Hungarian Gold Train's case, that country would have been Hungary. For unknown reasons the paintings became possession of the Austrian government and their current status is unknown.[1]
[edit] Developments since 1998
Most of the details of the Hungarian Gold Train were kept secret from the public by the United States government until 1998.[5] In that year, United States President Bill Clinton created the Presidential Advisory Commission on Holocaust Assets in the United States. In a report prepared by the committee that was published in October 1999 which detailed the handling of the train's assets by the United States, the committee cited a multitude of "shortcomings" of the US restitution efforts in Austria that eventually led to the property from the Hungarian Gold Train being so readily dispersed by United States officials. It concluded that the application of several policies regarding many assets on the train ensured they were never returned to their rightful owners.
In 2001 a lawsuit against the United States government was filed by Hungarian Holocaust survivors in a Florida district Federal Court for the government's mishandling of the assets on the Hungarian Gold Train. In 2005, the government reached a settlement worth $25.5 million. The money was allocated for distribution to various Jewish social service agencies for the benefit of Holocaust survivors.[6][7]
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ a b c d e f g h i "The Mystery of the Hungarian “Gold Train”", Presidential Advisory Commission on Holocaust Assets in the United States, October 14, 1999.
- ^ a b Dunn, Adam. "Nazis and the mysterious 'Gold Train", CNN, October 30, 2002.
- ^ a b c "Bureau of Labor Statistics", United States Department of Labor.
- ^ Kaplan, Jonathan E.. "Lawmakers Angry Over Slow Track of ‘Gold Train’ Case", The Hill, November 12, 2003.
- ^ "U.S. settles 'Gold Train' Holocaust claims", Associated Press / USA Today, December 20, 2004.
- ^ "Settlement in WWII 'Gold Train' Theft", Associated Press / The Washington Post, March 12, 2005.
- ^ "U.S. settles 'Gold Train' Holocaust claims", Associated Press / Jewish Virtual Library, December 20, 2004 / September 26, 2005.
[edit] References
- Zweig, Ronald W. (2002). The Gold Train: The Destruction of the Jews and the Looting of Hungary. William Morrow. ISBN 978-0-06-620956-2.