Attempts to change the registration as ‘Volljude’
The raids in February 1941, implementation of the Nuremberg Race Laws in the Netherlands at the end of March 1942, the obligation to wear a yellow Star of David a few months later and the Liro regulations of 8 August 1941 and 21 May 1942 were among the factors that clearly showed the consequences of being registered as Volljude. A few days after the large-scale raid in Amsterdam in July 1942, Mozes Mogrobi made several attempts to change the registration of himself and his family as Volljuden.
For example, he tried to convince the authorities that he had Turkish nationality and that his family was of ‘arabischen Blutes’ [‘Arab blood’]. After an initial rejection and pending his second request, Mozes Mogrobi asked the Turkish authorities to confirm that his father ‘tatsächlich arabischen Blutes ist.’ [was ‘actually of Arab blood.’]. He also stated that it was urgent ‘da es für mich eine Lebensfrage gilt.’ [‘because for me it is a question of life and death.’]. Mozes Mogrobi furthermore tried to collect all sorts of evidence that supposedly showed that he was not Jewish. For example, he sent the Abteilung innere Verwaltung [department for administration of the interior], part of the Generalkommissariat für Verwaltung und Justiz [general commissariat for administration and justice], an extract from the population register showing that he was registered as having Turkish nationality. He also collected a number of notarized statements by people who had declared under oath that his father was a Turkish subject and therefore his family ‘arabischen Blutes ist.’ Mogrobi moreover sent a copy of a page from a book with a reference to Moghrabi Mosque. This supposedly showed that the name Mogrobi signifies ‘a pure Arab Muslim.’ In addition, he had a report prepared by a Dutch doctor and physical anthropologist who concluded that although Mozes Mogrobi’s appearance was ‘Orientalisch’ [‘Oriental’], ‘aber bestimmt nicht typisch Jüdisch.’ [‘definitely not typically Jewish’]. He furthermore submitted a 1903 photograph of his father dressed in Arab-looking clothing.
His most far-reaching attempt to prove he was not Jewish was on 22 April 1943 when he served a summons on the Portuguese-Jewish Congregation of Amsterdam and accused the board of the Jewish Congregation of unjustly registering him and his family as members of it. On 6 May 1943 the court decided in Mozes Mogrobi’s favour.
A few days after the rejection, Mozes made a final attempt by submitting a request in which he repeated his earlier arguments. Unlike his previous attempts, he now asked for his registration to be changed to GII (quarter-Jew) and those of his children to GI (half-Jew). This attempt also failed.
Liquidation of the gallery and going into hiding
It did not emerge from research exactly when, after the promulgation on 12 March 1941 of regulation 48/1941 concerning the removal of Jews from the business community, the occupying forces sealed Mogrobi’s gallery. It did emerge from documentation, however, that the last occasion on which the name ‘Mogrobi’ appears in the buyers books of the Mak van Waay auction house was on 24 June 1941. It is also known that Mozes Mogrobi sold various artworks to Jan Herman van Heek, director of the Rijksmuseum Twenthe. on 1 February 1941 and 27 March 1942. These artworks were the subject of restitution application RC 1.145.
In March 1944 Omnia Treuhandgesellschaft mbH (hereinafter referred to as Omnia) received instructions from the Wirtschaftsprüfstelle to act as Liquidationstreuhänder of Mogrobi’s business. The Committee assumes on the grounds of research that the gallery had been sealed until that moment Liquidation was initiated at the end of March 1944. The Kammergerichtsrat [superior court counsel] instructed the gallery’s contents to be sold at auction. The sale took place on 25 July 1944 at the Mak van Waay auction house.
According to a post-war statement by Mozes’s wife Zilia Mogrobi-Jacobi, they went into hiding during the war in Sloterdijk. It is not known when this period of hiding started. In 1947 Zilia Mogrobi-Jacobi stated the following about it: ‘Destijds lag er reeds beslag op onze boedel, welk beslag gelegd was door een of andere Duitse instantie; alles was gezegeld. Wij waren in die tijd ondergedoken’. [‘At the time, all our possessions had already been seized. The seizure had been organized by some German agency or other. Everything was sealed. We went into hiding during that period.’]
Archival documents reveal that in April 1944 Mozes Mogrobi went to the police to report the theft of clothes and shoes with a value of 5,000 guilders from the warehouse of Jacob Aalderink, a fellow antiques dealer who lived around the corner from Mogrobi.
Fates of the Mogrobi family
Mozes and Zilia Mogrobi were arrested by the Sicherheitsdienst on 6 July 1944. It emerges from a post-war statement by Zilia that on 12 July 1944 she and Mozes were deported to Westerbork transit camp, and from there they were transported to Auschwitz concentration camp on 3 September 1944.
Before the end of the month Mozes Mogrobi was murdered in Auschwitz. He was 46 years old. His son Alfred Mogrobi, who was 23, was murdered in Buchenwald concentration camp on 1 December 1944. On 26 October 1944 Zilia Mogrobi was taken to the German labour camp Liebau, where she was liberated on 9 May 1945. The couple’s daughter, Sonja Mogrobi, also survived the war.
Mozes Mogrobi’s gallery after the war
Zilia Mogrobi continued her husband’s business after she had returned to the Netherlands on 13 June 1945. She submitted a number of compensation claims in order to receive some recompense for the goods lost during the Second World War. These claims primarily concerned the goods that went under the hammer at the Mak van Waay auction house on 25 July 1944 on the instructions of the occupying forces. Zilia Mogrobi stated the following about this after the war:
“De totaalschade, welke wij gedurende de bezettingstijd door diefstal uit onze zaak enz. enz. geleden hebben, bedraagt circa 50.000 gulden. Verder is onze privé-boedel in veiling gebracht bij de Fa. S. Mak van Waay, hetgeen ongeveer 58.000 gulden heeft opgebracht.” [The overall loss we sustained during the occupation because of thefts from our shop etc. etc. amounted to about 50,000 guilders. Furthermore, our personal possessions were auctioned off at the firm of S. Mak van Waay, and the proceeds were approximately 58,000 guilders.]
An accountant’s report reveals that Zilia Mogrobi-Jacobi received a total of 17,500 guilders from H.S. Nienhuis, the director of the Mak van Waay auction house. This payment related to the sale organized by Mak van Waay on 25 July 1944. Y. Scholten, who acted as Zilia Mogrobi-Jacobi’s authorized representative, wrote about this to O.J.T.N. Domela Nieuwenhuis, H.S. Nienhuis’s authorized representative:
“Ter voldoening aan de verbintenis, welke Uw client H.S. Nienhuis uit moraal en fatsoen tegenover mijn cliente, Mevrouw Mogrobi gevoelt te hebben ter zake van de door hem, tijdens de bezetting gehouden veiling (dd. 25 Juli 1944), van de goederen van cliente, kwamen wij het navolgende overeen:” [In fulfilment of the obligation that my client, Mrs Mogrobi, considers your client, H.S. Nienhuis, to be under on the grounds of ethics and decency in regard to the auction of my client’s goods that was conducted by him during the occupation on 25 July 1944, we have agreed as follows:]
It emerges from the agreements made and the subsequent entries referred to in the accountant’s report that Nienhuis paid the sum of 17,500 guilders in twelve instalments starting on 1 May 1947. The sums received did not benefit the profit and loss account of Mozes Mogrobi’s business but were paid into the personal account. According to the accountant’s report, the fact that the sums received were deposited in the personal account was related to ‘een verbintenis voortvloeiende uit moraal en fatsoen’ [‘an obligation arising from ethics and decency’], and it also aligns with Zilia Mogrobi-Jacobi’s statement that ‘onze privé-boedel in veiling [is] gebracht bij de Fa. S. Mak van Waay.’ [‘our personal possessions were auctioned off at the firm of S. Mak van Waay’]. The gallery was liquidated with effect from 1 October 1956 after Zilia Mogrobi-Jacobi, in her capacity as ‘eigenaresse’ [‘proprietress’], had reported to the commercial register in Amsterdam that the business had ceased trading.
No documents or indications were found in the archives of the Netherlands Art Property Foundation (hereinafter referred to as the SNK) that bear witness to any contact between Zilia Mogrobi-Jacobi and the SNK.