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The rape of europa

January 13, 2007

The rape of europa New York City premiere 2007 - n.y. Jewish Film Festival - January 16 & 17, 2007

A documentary film on the theft and rescue of Europe’s art treasures in World War Two

Tuesday, January 16, 2:30 & 6:00 PM at THE JEWISH MUSEUM, 1109 Fifth Avenue @ 92nd St., (212) 423-3200 Discussion after the 6PM showing with a distinguished panel (see below*)

Wednesday, January 17, 6:00 PM at WALTER READE THEATER at the Lincoln Center, Broadway bet’n 65th & 66th Street, (212) 875-5600 Click here for other screenings around the country. The film will be aired on PBS in the fall of 2007.

The Rape of Europa is a two-hour documentary based on the award-winning history by Lynn H. Nicholas. It tells the epic story of the systematic theft and deliberate destruction – as well as the heroic rescue – of Europe's art treasures during the Third Reich and the Second World War. The Rape of Europa interweaves the twelve-year history of Nazi art looting with the dramatic story of the unprecedented efforts of the U.S. and British “Monuments Men”, curators and art historians who were sent into the theater of war to rescue and return displaced art. Ordinary heroes, from truck drivers to department store clerks, also fought back in a miraculous effort to safeguard the millions of lost, hidden and stolen treasures.

The Rape of Europa takes the audience on a journey through seven countries, into the violent whirlwind of fanaticism, greed and warfare that threatened to wipe out the artistic heritage of Europe. Considerable emphasis is given to the threatened art treasures of Poland and the amazing work undertaken by Polish citizens to protect what they could of their cultural heritage. And sadly, the film also records the tremendous toll that the war exacted on Polish art and monuments.

While filming in Poland, the team cooperated with the Royal Castle in Warsaw, the St. Mary’s Church and the Czartoryski Museum in Krakow, with Adam Zamoyski at the Sienawa Estate, and with Monika Kuhnke of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ office for the restitution of cultural goods. The film also features rare historical footage from the Czolowka Film Studio. The panel discussion following the Jan.16 evening screening will include historian Lynn H. Nicholas, Monica Dugot of Christie’s, “Monuments Man” Harry Ettlinger, and co-filmmaker Richard Berge.