Personal exchange in Munich
The idea for the joint trip to Munich was born during Zoom meetings with provenance researchers. They had been researching the provenance of 145 silver objects from the Münchner Stadtmuseum and looking for entitled heirs. Between 1939 and 1940, the museum acquired silver objects from the Municipal Loan Office, which had to be handed over by Jewish families under state compulsion (the so-called “Silberzwangsabgabe”). Through research in recent years, 47 names of Jewish owners have been identified. In order to find out more, some of the families decided to travel to Bavaria. The “Munich roots” program was put together by Dr Regina Prinz, Head of Provenance Research at the Münchner Stadtmuseum, and carried out together with eleven cooperation partners. It included guided tours and lectures, for example at the Munich Documentation Center for the History of the National Socialism, the Zentralinstitut für Kunstgeschichte, the New Jewish Cemetery and the Ohel Jakob Synagogue.
At the restitution ceremony for the silver objects in the Jewish Museum Munich, relatives of those persecuted by the Nazi regime took the floor. They spoke movingly about the life stories and fate of their grandparents, great-grandparents and other relatives. Finally, they handed over the restituted objects to the Münchner Stadtmuseum and the Jewish Museum Munich so that they can be exhibited at their place of origin in the future. Instead of objects, the families took with them new knowledge about the fate of their ancestors. Some of them even found out about previously unknown relatives whom they met for the first time in Munich.
Fabienne Huguenin, Generaldirektion der Staatlichen Archive Bayerns