by Charles Tomas,
Curator Masonic Museum Belgium, Brussels
On August 24th and 27th, 1940 a total of 82 crates of books, works of
art and masonic ritualia
were gathered by the German occupiers in the masonic lodges of Brussels.
Not less than 97 crates
were assembled in other masonic lodges of Belgium, which makes a total
of at least 179 crates.
Thanks to the German administrative accuracy the transports to Berlin
on November 26th, 1940 and
January 17th, 1941 can be traced. The masonic lodges were the first
institutions to be spoiled
systematically in Belgium: first by the Sicherheitsdienst (Security
Service), closely followed by the
Einsatzst Reichsleiter Rosenberg. The Belgian interest in masonic material
was underlined by the fact
that Reinhard Heydrich und Alfred Rosenberg personally visited the
lodges in Brussels in July 1940.
The lodges, especially of Brussels and Antwerp were used during the
Second World War as depots
of spoiled cultural objects or as national socialist administrative
centres.
In 1946 nine crates, containing Belgian mostly freemason materials and
Jewish libraries from
Antwerp and Brussels returned from the American Collecting Point Offenbach
in Germany. On
February 25th, 1949 another four were restituted to Belgium, containing
among other things masonic
books. At least 170 crates of the masonic cultural goods never returned
to Belgium. Only during the
last years concrete evidence and locations of lost freemason's material
of Belgian origin turned up: in
Wurzburg (Germany), in the Osobyi Archives in Moscow (Russian Federation)
and in the library of
the University of Poznan (Poland). The discoveries in Moscow were confirmed
by Belgian
historians, who did active research there. 2,265 freemason dossiers
of the years 1784-1940 were
found. The archives contain documents of the Grand Orient of Belgium,
the Higher Council of
Belgian lodges and the working places Les amis philantropes and Les
amis du progrés, even of
daughter lodges in London. Besides, regulations, circulars, protocols
of the working of the lodges,
also the publications and bulletins were found in Moscow. The text
of speeches, publications of
members of Belgian freemasonry on political and social issues and the
history of freemasonry of
Belgium are also kept in the same archives. Important international
correspondence with lodges in
Europe and America completes the discovery.
The period of the Cold War made every possibility of restitution between
Western and Eastern
European countries impossible. The officials, experts and researchers
agree how much the attitude of
the Russian authorities on this subject remains uncertain. Even the
law proposal of the Duma
concerning restitution of works of art and archives differentiates
between 'legal' and 'illegal' spoils of
war.
In Belgium the Ministry of Economic Affairs is coordinating the research
about cultural losses of
Belgian origin. A close cooperation and working relationship was established
between the Belgian
freemasonry and the Ministry of Economic Affairs. In the meantime the
Belgian freemason's lodges
are documenting and investigating the cultural losses they suffered
and are providing evidence of
ownership of these lost cultural objects.