Log in
Register
Subscribe
Digital & mobile
Events
Topics A-Z
Newsletters
Jobs
Search World politics
Business & finance
Economics
Science & technology
Culture
Blogs
Debate
The World in 2013
Multimedia
Print edition
This site uses cookies. By continuing to browse the site you are agreeing to our use of cookies. Review our cookies information for more details
Erasmus
Comment (3)
Religion and public policy
Permalink
Reprints & permissions Previous
Next
Latest Erasmus
Latest from all our blogs
About Erasmus Alandmark verdict on religious heritage
This blog, named after the Dutch Renaissance humanist and scholar, considers the intersections between religion and public policy
Comfort for Aphrodite Mar 21st 2013, 17:57 by B.C.
Like
21
Tweet
1
THIS week may yet go down in history as a happy moment for Cyprus, and in particular for relations between Cyprus and the authorities in Germany. No, I haven't taken leave of my senses, and that is not a misprint. In between all the gloomy news of the Cypriot banking crisis, there has been a landmark court decision in Munich which has very positive implications not only for the religious and artistic heritage of Cyprus but for all countries (think of Mali, Syria, Egypt, Iraq) where war or public disorder has provided opportunities for looting and trafficking in cultural objects.
RSS feed Advertisement
In a thorny civil case, the Munich court upheld the claim of four Cypriot parties (the government plus the Greek Orthodox, Maronite and Armenian churches) for the return of 173 objects (including priceless mosaics, frescoes and icons) that were looted from churches in Cyprus during the late 1970s. The case isn't quite over, because the fate of 60 more objects has still to be determined, and an appeal to an even higher court is still technically possible. But a German lawyer acting for the Cypriots told a Munich daily, the Suddeutsche Zeitung (SDZ) that he hopes the objects will be back on the island by the end of the year. Explore trending topics
In any case, a bizarre story which came to a head in 1997 seems to be nearing its end. On October 10th of that year, German police burst into a Munich apartment and several other premises owned by Aydin Dikmen, a Turkish-born art dealer, and seized thousands of large and small artefacts, of which the most important part originated in Cyprus. The operation was hailed as a victory in the battle against art smuggling; but ever since then, the confiscated objects have been languishing in a police vault in Bavaria as legal battles rage. One of the objects that may soon go home is a 1,500-year-old mosaic, of the apostle Thomas, that was hacked from the wall of the Kanakaria church in the northern extremity of Cyprus, one of the oldest places of near-continuous worship in the world. In a landmark case in 1989, a court in Indiana ordered the return to the Cypriot church of four other mosaics from Kanakaria. Court documents showed how Mr Dikmen had sold the four mosaics to a ring of intermediaries who in turn sold them to an Indiana gallery owner. The Indiana case made American legal history, by invoking the principle that a thief cannot pass on good title, and the Munich case may be a similarly important moment in the legal history of Europe. It is not, by the way, a simple story of Greek heroes and Turkish villains. One of the first people to draw attention to the looting of Cypriot churches was a brave TurkishCypriot writer, Mehmet Yasin; and the very fact that there was an international market in mosaics and frescoes (in some cases visibly hacked out of walls) reflects the tastes and
Comments and tw eets on popular topics
Readers' comments
Germany Europe India Grillo
Greece Growth Rate
James Hansen
EU Italy
Cypriot
Cyprus
African
Employment
Asia
Israel
Argentina
Iran
UK
US
China
Russia
Barack Obama
Iraq
Hansen Full version
Change time span
converted by Web2PDFConvert.com
aspirations of wealthy dealers and collectors, some of them Greek.
Recent Activity
The success of the Munich operation 15 years ago reflected a moment of co-operation between a strange mixture of parties: the German police, plus the late Archbishop Chrysostomos I of Cyprus who mandated the handling of the case to a lay woman, who in turn won the confidence of one of Mr Dikmen's erstwhile business partners. As the SDZ recalled on Tuesday, this unlikely posse managed to pull off one of the most spectacular sting operations in the annals of cultural detective work. Later that spirit of co-operation collapsed, in part because of poor co-operation between different Cypriot agencies. One of the holdups has been German demands for tax from the money that Mr Dikmen made on the mosaics that were adjudicated in Indiana. But at the crucial moment, when Germans and Cypriots were co-operating in good faith and taking risks for one another, the results were impressive. Might there be a lesson there for the handling of the present crisis? I wonder.
Sign Up
C reate an account or log in to see what your friends a
Looking for India’s Zuckerberg 568 people recommended this. A surprising surrender 130 people recommended this. Hillary Clinton's farcically late conversion on gay m 1,120 people recommended this. Small island, big finger 568 people recommended this.
Facebook social plugin
Latest blog posts - All times are GMT Previous
Venezuela’s election: Battling it out Americas view - 1 hour 12 mins ago
Orthodox Christians and Catholics: One lung or two
Focus: France Graphic detail - 1 hour 37 mins ago Recommend
18
Like
21
Tweet
0
Share
1
Submit to reddit View all comments (3)
The week ahead: March 22nd 2013: General direction
Add your comment
Newsbook - 1 hour 43 mins ago
More from The Economist The Economist on China: Weekly roundup Analects - Mar 22nd, 08:04
Utilities: Google's Google problem Free exchange - Mar 21st, 21:51
Electronic cigarettes: No smoke. Why the fire?
Binding the press: A rotten deal
Euroscepticism in Germany: Silent no more Barack Obama's foreign policy: The price of detachment Lexington's notebook - Mar 21st, 20:43
Obesity rates: Fat of the lands
Ewald-Heinrich von Kleist
Comments on The euro-zone crisis: Just when you thought it was …
Spain’s Socialists: Why Spain’s left is in a funk
E-cigarettes: Vape ’em if you got ’em
Bosco Ntaganda: A surprising surrender
Barack Obama in Israel: A corker of a speech Pomegranate - Mar 21st, 19:36
More from our blogs »
Most popular
Related items TOPIC: Indiana »
TOPIC: Cyprus »
Building infrastructure: A river runs through it Agriculture: Fields of gold Election night: A convincing win for Barack Obama
The euro zone crisis: Too big to guarantee The Cyprus crisis: On the run The Cyprus bail-in: A bungled bank raid
TOPIC: Munich » Gymnastics: Achilles heel German property: Euro angst hits home Beer and work: Frothy prices
Recommended
Commented
1
The Cyprus bail-out Unfair, short-sighted and self-defeating
2 3 4 5
The Iraq war: Anniversary of a mass delusion Banyan: The old regime and the revolution Politics this week Money and power: Don’t flaunt it
Advertisement
converted by Web2PDFConvert.com
Readers' comments The Economist welcomes your views. Please stay on topic and be respectful of other readers. Review our comments policy.
Add a comment (up to 5,000 characters)
POST
Sort: Newest first
Oldest first
Readers' most recommended
ballymichael 2 hours 51 mins ago A lovely story. Thanks. I'm currently (cold-hearted capitalist that I am) actually acutely upset about the level of recrimination and hatred between germany and cyprus over the financial crisis. so it did me a lot of good to read it. Recommend
0
Report
Permalink
Reply
MrRFox Mar 22nd, 05:09 Nice piece, and we do have to make some allowances for lay-persons waxing poetic about the substance of the law, as here "The Indiana case made American legal history, by invoking the principle that a thief cannot pass on good title, ...." As the court noted in the instant case, 'Cyprus v. Goldberg & Feldman' "There are long established rules of law in Indiana that a thief never obtains title to stolen items, and that one can pass no greater title than one has. Torian v. McClure ...(1882); Breckenridge v. McAfee ...(1876)." Recommend
0
Report
Permalink
Reply
Cypris saw Cypris of Knidos and cried "When did Praxiteles see me naked?" Cypris is one of Aphrodite's names, and Cyprus is where she was born, rising from the waves. 0
Report
Permalink
Analects | China Americas view | The Americas Babbage | Science and technology Banyan | Asia Baobab | Africa Blighty | Britain Buttonwood's notebook | Financial markets Cassandra | The World in 2013 Charlemagne | European politics Democracy in America | American politics Eastern approaches | Ex-communist Europe Erasmus | Religion and public policy Feast and famine | Demography and development Free exchange | Economics Game theory | Sports Graphic detail | Charts, maps and infographics Gulliver | Business travel Johnson | Language Lexington's notebook | American politics Newsbook | News analysis Prospero | Books, arts and culture Pomegranate | The Middle East Schumpeter | Business and management
Products & events Stay informed today and every day Get e-mail newsletters Subscribe to The Economist's free e-mail newsletters and alerts.
bampbs Mar 21st, 18:16
Recommend
Economist blogs
Reply
Follow The Economist on Twitter Subscribe to The Economist's latest article postings on Twitter Follow The Economist on Facebook See a selection of The Economist's articles, events, topical videos and debates on Facebook. Ads by Google
The Future of Glasses Perfect Focus for Every Distance Try Superfocus Risk Free w w w .superfocus.com/BestGlasses
Pros and Cons of Reverse Reverse mortgages aren't right for everyone. Learn the downsides. ReverseMortgageGuides.org
converted by Web2PDFConvert.com
Classified ads
About The Economist Media directory Advertising info Staff books Career opportunities Subscribe Contact us Site index Copyright Š The Economist Newspaper Limited 2013. All rights reserved.
[+] Site Feedback
Accessibility Privacy policy Cookies info Terms of use
Help
converted by Web2PDFConvert.com