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The Battle for Nazi-Looted Art

After nearly seven decades of searching, a Holocaust survivor discovered her family's stolen Pissarro, 'Shepherdess Bringing in Sheep'—and now she wants it back.
"Shepherdess Bringing in Sheep," painted by Camille Pissarro in 1886, was plundered by the Nazis and currently resides in the University of Oklahoma's Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art.
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Raymond Dowd is angry. He shoves a ream of paper several inches thick across a conference table in his midtown Manhattan office. The stack contains copies of property declarations by Jews from nearly 80 years ago. Tax documents aren’t the most thrilling read, but Dowd, a lawyer who has handled several World War II–era restitution cases, says the papers are essential to understanding how the Nazis stripped Jews of so much art. By making Jews declare what they owned, sometimes in exchange for travel papers, the Nazis were creating an inventory of their belongings. “This happened on a sunny day. Birds singing, Jews lining up, a blond chick with a typewriter typing this stuff up. No machine guns, no violence,” he says. “Some tax thing. That’s how it happened.”

The Nazis used those records of what Jews owned and similar methods to plunder their possessions, including an estimated 650,000 art objects. The thefts included Van Gogh’s , Vermeer’s and Klimt’s gold-layered art nouveau masterpiece . They also included a painting of a peasant woman with a flock of sheep, which now hangs in

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