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Stolen Legacy: Nazi Theft and the Quest for Justice at Krausenstrasse 17/18, Berlin Paperback – October 1, 2016
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Stolen Legacy is the story of how the Nazis deprived a once prominent Berlin Jewish family of a huge building―and the battle to reclaim it. Built by the author’s great grandfather in 1910, the property was the business headquarters of the H. Wolff fur company, one of the largest and most successful in Germany during the early part of the last century. The wealth generated in the “Wolff building” as it came to be known, enabled the family to live on a large estate in Wannsee, an elite suburb of Berlin.
The Nazis had other plans for the building at Krausenstrasse 17/18. In 1937 the Victoria Insurance Company foreclosed on the mortgage and transferred ownership to the Reichsbahn, Hitler’s railways, the state-owned organization that later transported millions of Jews across Europe to the death camps. The Victoria, headed then by a German businessman and lawyer with connections to the very top of the Nazi Party, is still today one of Germany’s leading insurance companies. But during the war it was part of a consortium insuring the buildings at the Auschwitz death camp.
When the Third Reich was defeated in 1945 the building lay in the Soviet sector. In 1961, when the Wall was constructed dividing Berlin, the building fell two blocks east of Checkpoint Charlie, just inside the Communist state, and beyond legal reach.
Dina Gold grew up hearing her grandmother’s tales of the glamorous life she once led, but had no paperwork at all to prove ownership of the building. When the Wall fell in 1989, Dina remembered her stories and decided to seek the truth and battle for restitution.
This book is about one family, but the message is universal. Even now thousands of victims, or their heirs, are struggling to reclaim their family’s property stolen by the Nazis. It is never too late to honor the memory of our ancestors and fight to overturn injustice.
What Others are Saying About Stolen Legacy
“Dina Gold digs deep into her history and leaves no stone unturned in her riveting account of the struggle for restitution of the property taken from her family by the Nazis. This is a meticulous and finely written account of her struggle to seek belated justice for her mother, with all the twists and turns one would expect from a fictional detective story―but it is all true.”
E. Randol Schoenberg, attorney (“Woman in Gold”)
“A testament to the human spirit”
Ambassador Stuart E. Eizenstat
"An exceptional adventure in Holocaust literature. Dina Gold combines investigative journalism with a keen sense of history to uncover a story everyone should read."
Marvin Kalb, Harvard professor emeritus, now senior adviser to Pulitzer Center, former network correspondent.
“Dina Gold tells the fascinating story of the uphill attempts of one family--her own – to regain the property that had been stolen from them by the Nazis. It is an amazing story.”
Walter Laqueur, historian, political commentator and author
"Dina Gold has written a crisp, page-turning nonfiction whodunit, and proves herself to be an unyielding sleuth in the pursuit of justice for her family. At the same time, it is meticulously researched journalism that provides a fresh perspective on history."
Nadine Epstein, Editor, Moment magazine
"The Holocaust was an immense act of murder. But it was also an immense act of theft. The stolen property was seized and passed on, first by the Nazis and then by governments that followed. This is the story of a single such property."
Walter Reich, Yitzhak Rabin Chair, George Washington University and former Director of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
“Her property becomes in a way the reader's property and we follow with great interest and intensity her efforts to recover not only a material legacy but the entire history of her family.”
Serge Klarsfeld, French lawyer and Nazi hunter
About the Author
Dina Gold (Washington, D.C.) is a former BBC investigative journalist and television producer. She currently serves as co chair of the Washington Jewish Film Festival and is a senior editor at Moment magazine, the largest independent Jewish magazine in North America.
- Print length270 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherAmerican Bar Association
- Publication dateOctober 1, 2016
- Dimensions6.02 x 1.03 x 8.96 inches
- ISBN-101634254279
- ISBN-13978-1634254274
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Editorial Reviews
Review
An exceptional adventure in Holocaust literature. Dina Gold combines investigative journalism with a keen sense of history to uncover a story everyone should read. -- Marvin Kalb, Harvard professor emeritus; now senior adviser to Pulitzer Center; former network correspondent
The research for stolen assets remaining in Hitler's Germany led some survivors of famous German-Jewish families to write historic and moving works which mix, at the same time, judicial investigations and human epics – that's the case for Dina Gold's Stolen Legacy. Her property becomes in a way the reader's property and we follow with great interest and intensity her efforts to recover not only a material legacy but the entire history of her family. -- Serge Klarsfeld, lawyer; Nazi hunter
Dina Gold has written a crisp, page-turning nonfiction whodunit, and proves herself to be an unyielding sleuth in the pursuit of justice for her family. At the same time, it is meticulously researched journalism that provides a fresh perspective on history. -- Nadine Epstein, editor, Moment magazine
Dina Gold tells the fascinating story of the uphill attempts of one family--her own – to regain the property that had been stolen from them by the Nazis. It is an amazing story. -- Walter Laqueur, historian; political commentator; author of The Terrible Secret
The Holocaust―the project of exterminating Europe's Jews--was an immense act of murder. It was also an immense act of theft. The murder was, of course, the incomparably greater crime. The dead could never be brought back to life. The ash from crematoria was dumped into rivers or spread across fields; the bodies shot into ravines decomposed in Europe's mutilated earth. Yet the stolen property―of those who were murdered and the minority who escaped or otherwise survived―was seized and passed on, first by the Nazis and then by the governments that followed, to new possessors, public and private. Some pretended to own that property; most knew its real origins; few were willing to part with it. This is the story of a single such property that, by indefatigable effort, was reclaimed, at least partly, two generations later. It's the story of the theft. But it's also, by inference, a small part of the story of the murder. And it's the story of a rare act of belated and incomplete, but symbolically resonant, historical justice. -- Walter Reich, Yitzhak Rabin Memorial Professor of International Affairs, Ethics and Human Behavior; former Director of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : American Bar Association; Reprint edition (October 1, 2016)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 270 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1634254279
- ISBN-13 : 978-1634254274
- Item Weight : 1.17 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.02 x 1.03 x 8.96 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #3,284,481 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #553 in Property Law (Books)
- #1,546 in Historical Germany Biographies
- #2,646 in Legal History (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author
Dina Gold is a former London based BBC investigative journalist and television producer. She studied at the University of London and Oxford University, where she was the first woman to graduate from Corpus Christi College since its foundation in 1517. She moved to the USA in 2008 and now lives in Washington DC. She currently serves as co-chair of the Washington Jewish Film Festival and is a senior editor at Moment magazine, the largest independent Jewish magazine in North America.
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Dina Gold came from a wealthy Jewish family in pre-Hitler Germany. Her great-grandfather, Victor Wolff, was a fur trader. In 1908-1909, he had architect Friedrich Kristeller design a building for him in Berlin. It was six stories high and a full block in length. It was a grand building. They first used it for their fur business and when the economy shrank, they rented the spaces out to others. When the Nazis came into power, the building was confiscated and turned over to the Transportation division of the government. Dina took on the daunting task of re-claiming the building as part of the Jewish reclamation movement in Berlin.
The book tells of Dina’s search for documentation as to her trying to get the building returned to her family. Searching for old records proving her family owned the building and then showing how it went through the changes until the present time. Would she find all the records and would they be believed and she could get the building back? Would she be able to get it back? Was it worth it?
It is a fascinating book.
Norman Houston
Washington, D.C. and Belfast N.I.
A must read for students of Germany, the Holocaust, Nazi looting and the insurance industry.