Press Release 08-21-2001
RÜCKGABE
(RESTITUTION)
Intervention
for the awareness
of robbery and disguise
in the festival town of Salzburg
Within
the scope of the International Summer Academy for Fine Arts 2001.
By
Wolfram P. Kastner and Martin Krenn in cooperation with the following
students: Maria Barthel, Tanja Boukal, Simone M. Paischer, Ian Pedigo,
Martin Pi and Horst Reichard
Ý Amid
the Appearance of Legality: Robbery without Restitution
After
the ìunionî of Austria with the NS system in 1938, Jewish citizens
were excluded from the public legal system.Ý Immediately following
began the imprisonment of the Jewish people and the federal seizure
of Jewish property.
These
actions were realised ìlegallyî by the enforcement of specially
established rights that benefited members of the ìAryanî nation.
The Nazi term ìArisierungî is nothing else than a synonym for nationally
sanctioned robbery.Ý The result was that many people were granted
rights to claim the property of their Jewish neighbours.Ý Houses,
furniture, jewellery, books and other personal possessions of the
persecuted Jews were stolen by their ìAryanî neighbours, or were
bought for ridiculously low amounts.
In
the state documents (Arisierungsakten), the names of the ìAryanî
profiteers, the stolen furnishings, the real estates and the meager
amounts that Jewish owners were forced to accept or were reported
with bureaucratic meticulousness.Ý These sales were paid to banks,
and not fully redeemable by the Jewish owners due to special taxes
that extracted fees for the transference of Jewish property and
also for the enforced Jewish emigration out of the country (the
ìEntjudungsabgabeî and the ìReichsfluchtsteuerî).Ý
After
1945, the private and public restitution of all or any possessions
has been dragged out, made more difficult or made impossible. Despite
of a few exceptions, there has been no return of anything.
The
political and judicial systems, administrations and private profiteers
did everything to disguise these facts and have refused any restitution,
rather than making an attempt to arrange it.
How
many households in Salzburg still own such unlawful property?
This
intervention entitled Rückgabe ("Restitution"), aims
to visualise this buried scandal.
ìRückgabestelle
Salzburg î (ìRestitution Point Salzburgî), tries to bring attention
to these stolen possessions at specific locations in the city. These
objects are marked in a simple and effective way and are placed
in the public view.
The
marking of these objects informs the public about what happened
and what has been neglected, as well as starting a process of public
awareness and discussion.
All
political forces, public and legal authorities, and private profiteers
of this "legal" robbery are being demanded for the return
of stolen possessions to the deprived and their heirs.
The "Restitution
Point" offers information and discussion.Ý Documents about
the refused returns of possessions are displayed also.
We are thankful for further remarks and suggestions.
Opening hours of the return counter:
21st of August ñ 1st of September 2001
Gallery 5020, Sigmund-Haffner-Gasse 12/1
Tue
ñ FriÝ 2 p.m. ñ 6 p.m.
Sat 10 a.m. ñ 1 p.m.
Discussion: Thursday, 23rd of August, 7 p.m.
With Albert Lichtblau (historian commission), Marko Feingold
(society of cultural affairs), Wolfram P. Kastner and Martin Krenn
(artists)
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