The Nazis seized an estimated 20% of art in Europe, and with scores of items still not returned to the families that owned them, Germany is struggling to keep up with the demands of its past. #NBCNewsThreads (1/8) https://nbcnews.to/3qBI3sF 
Historical consensus is clear that Jewish persecution took place in Nazi Germany, but heirs of Jewish art dealers are struggling to prove that their treasures were forcibly sold, leading to collections being sold for a fraction of what heirs say their value is. (3/8)
The Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation attributes the sale price of a Medieval art collection for roughly one third the amount claimed by heirs to tough negotiations in a market reeling from Europe’s financial crash, rather than Nazi persecution. (4/8)
US lawmakers called the claim that pre-1939 conditions for Jews in Germany were not persecutory “deeply concerning."

But America's highest court unanimously ruled it has no jurisdiction to take action in the case. (5/8)
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