Mission_Mattéoli

Mission Mattéoli

Mission Mattéoli

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The Study Mission on the Spoliation of Jews in France (French: La mission d'étude sur la spoliation des Juifs de France), also known as the Mission Mattéoli (or Mattéoli Mission), was set up in March 1997 by Alain Juppé, then Prime Minister, and chaired by Jean Mattéoli.[1]

The Mattéoli Mission Final Report[2] was published in 2000 and contains information about the dispossession of the Jews during the German occupation of France and proposals concerning compensation and remembrance.[3]

Creation of the mission

The Mattéoli Mission was created by decree on 25 March 1997 by Prime Minister Alain Juppé, who appointed Jean Mattéoli as its chairman. Its mission was:[4]

  • Research the fate of confiscated items
  • Determine their whereabouts
  • Draw up an inventory of seized assets
  • Make proposals to the government on the future of these assets

The impetus for the creation was a historic speech by president Jacques Chirac, delivered on 16 July 1995 for the 53rd anniversary of the Vel' d'Hiv Roundup in which President Chirac recognized that the Vichy regime had supported the genocidal Nazi policy of the Final Solution.[5] It was the first time a French president recognized France's responsibility for the murder of French Jews in the Holocaust.[6][7][8]

In the days that followed, the press published research by Serge Klarsfeld of the accounts of the liquidator of the Drancy camp, Maurice Kiffer.[9] At the CRIF dinner, Prime Minister Alain Juppé announced that he was going to create a commission to study the plundering of the Jews in France during the Nazi occupation.[10]

The "Mattéoli mission" was set up in 1997 and Jean Mattéoli, former resistance fighter and president of the French Economic and Social Council was named to lead it.[11]

The vice-presidency was entrusted to Professor Ady Steg, doctor, son of a deportee, activist in Jewish organizations, and president of the Alliance Israelite Universelle.[12]

Also belonging to this mission are historians François Furet and Annette Wieviorka, Jean Favier, former director of the Archives of France, Jean Kahn, president of the Israelite Consistory, Serge Klarsfeld, Alain Pierret who had been French Ambassador to Israel, and Caroline Piketty, curator heritage who was seconded as archivist to the Mission.[13][14][15]

Due to the scale of the work, Antoine Prost and Claire Andrieu agreed to be part of the study mission following the death of François Furet in 1997.

The findings were released on 17 April 2000.[16]

Conclusions

The report estimated the value of property plundered by the Nazis from Jews in France at 1.35 billion euros (more than 5.2 billion francs at the time), apart from the looting of apartments and works of art by the Germans. Financial theft (insurance policies, bank accounts, and securities, etc.) amounted to 520 million euros.[17][18]

The "aryanization" of businesses and real estate was assessed at 5.1 million euros.

The sums of money taken by the French authorities from those interned in the camps exceeded 91 million euros.[19] The Mattéoli mission estimated that between 90% and 95% of goods and assets of all kinds had been returned since the end of the war. In addition, of the 100,000 works of art that were looted, 45,000 have been returned to their owners.

Results

Following the first recommendations of the two progress reports of this mission, published in January 1998 and 1999, a Commission for the compensation of victims of spoliations resulting from the anti-Semitic legislation in force during the Occupation was set up.[20] in September 1999. Chaired by Pierre Drai,[21] the commission has already received nearly 4,500 individual requests. The then Prime Minister, Lionel Jospin, set up a financial compensation mechanism for the orphans of deported Jews from France.[22][23]

Lionel Jospin also announced, in November 1999, the creation of a Foundation for the Memory of the Shoah which should "aim to develop research and disseminate knowledge of anti-Semitic persecutions (...) as well as of anti-Semitic persecutions (...) victims of these persecutions and of the conditions which in France allowed the great majority of Jews to escape deportation".[24]

It should "support, in particular, the initiatives of non-profit legal persons who provide moral, technical or financial support to those who have suffered from these persecutions, to their families, to those who have helped them or to the Resistance".

This wish for the mission of the Foundation to be extended to the Resistance was moreover underlined by Jean Mattéoli,

The Mattéoli mission also wanted, in the same recommendation, that the object of the Foundation be extended to research on "other genocides or crimes against humanity", the Foundation not therefore having to limit its field of activity during the Holocaust.

Recommendation No. 11 of the general report of the "Mattéoli mission" provides that "the unclaimed funds of any kind resulting from the spoliation must be paid by public and private institutions to the Foundation for Memory".[25]

Professor Ady Steg, vice-president of the "Mattéoli mission" estimated that 1.4 billion francs should, for this purpose, be paid by the State and 1 billion francs by financial institutions.[26]

Regarding financial spoliations, the "Mattéoli mission" underlines that "the fact that mergers, acquisitions and changes of statutes have taken place since the war does not authorize financial establishments, insurance companies to consider themselves as discharged from the responsibilities contracted by companies which they have absorbed or from which they come."

The report recommends that, when the spoliation of a property is established, compensation should be de jure "regardless of the limitation periods in force".

The Prime Minister indicated, on April 19, 2000, that "these proposals obtained from him an agreement in principle and that after an inter-ministerial work, he would announce in the coming weeks the follow-up that the Government intends to reserve for them".

For its part, the French Association of Banks announced that French banks were committed "to applying the recommendations contained in the Mattéoli report and to making a significant financial contribution to the Fondation pour la Mémoire".[27]

Publications

  • Guide des recherches dans les archives des spoliations et des restitutions / Mission d'étude sur la spoliation des Juifs de France (PDF). Mission étude spoliation juifs. Paris: La Documentation française. 2000. p. 318..
  • Mission d'étude sur la spoliation des Juifs de France - Rapport général by Jean Mattéoli

Bibliography[28]

See also


References

  1. "La Mission Mattéoli - CIVS". www.civs.gouv.fr. Archived from the original on 2016-08-03. Retrieved 2021-06-07.
  2. Mattéoli, Jean (2000). Rapport Général Mission d'étude sur la spoliation des Juifs de France (PDF). Vie-publique.fr (Report). Paris: DILA.
  3. "Le discours de Jacques Chirac au Vel d'hiv en 1995". LEFIGARO (in French). 27 March 2014. Retrieved 2021-06-07.
  4. "Notre histoire". Fondation pour la Mémoire de la Shoah (in French). Retrieved 2021-06-07.
  5. Simons, Marlise (1995-07-17). "Chirac Affirms France's Guilt In Fate of Jews". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on 2013-03-10. Retrieved 2021-06-07.
  6. Laloum, Jean (2002). "La restitution des biens spoliés". Les Cahiers de la Shoah (6): 13–58. ISBN 2251694102. ISSN 1262-0386. OCLC 234149896.
  7. Wieviorka, Annette (2012-12-01). "Éléments pour une histoire de la Mission Mattéoli". La Revue des droits de l'homme. Revue du Centre de recherches et d'études sur les droits fondamentaux (in French) (2). doi:10.4000/revdh.249. ISSN 2264-119X.
  8. "L'archiviste Caroline Piketty lève le voile sur notre Histoire". Le Telegramme (in French). 2007-05-12. Retrieved 2021-06-15.
  9. "Chronologie Jean KAHN | Jean KAHN Society" (in French). Retrieved 2021-06-15.
  10. "Klarsfeld, Serge (b. 1935) | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2021-06-15.
  11. Daley, Suzanne (2000-04-18). "French Issue First Detailed Study of Wartime Thefts From Jews". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on 2015-05-27. Retrieved 2021-07-11.
  12. Daley, Suzanne (2000-04-18). "French Issue First Detailed Study of Wartime Thefts From Jews". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on 2015-05-27. Retrieved 2021-06-15. The report was by the Matteoli Commission, which started the first major study of the subject three years ago. The commission found that assets worth $1.3 billion today were seized as bank accounts were frozen, fines were demanded, businesses were taken over, and apartments were ransacked.
  13. Guardian Staff (1999-03-28). "Holocaust shame of Barclays". the Guardian. Archived from the original on 2013-08-23. Retrieved 2021-06-15. Barclays was only forced to confront its wartime activities recently when the Matteoli Commission in France began an investigation into the conduct of banks operating in Nazi-occupied France. The commission discovered that the cashier from the Drancy transit camp, Maurice Keiffer, deposited 290,000 francs at Barclays' Paris office in July 1944, taken from Jewish prisoners on their way to Auschwitz. It also found that French banks seized 3.5 billion old francs—around half a billion pounds today—from Jews on behalf of the Nazis.
  14. "Home - CIVS". www.civs.gouv.fr. Retrieved 2021-06-15.
  15. à 00h00, Par S. P. Le 15 juillet 2000 (2000-07-14). "La France va indemniser les enfants de déportés juifs". leparisien.fr (in French). Retrieved 2021-06-15.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  16. "Our history". Fondation pour la Mémoire de la Shoah. Retrieved 2021-06-15.
  17. "La mission Mattéoli: objectifs et bilan". Musée d'Art et d'Histoire du Judaïsme (in French). 2020-12-09. Retrieved 2021-06-15.
  18. Dahlburg, John-Thor (18 April 2000). "'Economic Strangulation' of Jews in WWII France Put at $1.2 Billion". Los Angeles Times.
  19. "The Mattéoli Mission - CIVS". www.civs.gouv.fr. Retrieved 2021-06-07.

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