Rothschild lawsuit draws attention to family’s Vienna past
Historian says Jewish banking dynasty, once a major power in the country, has been ‘repressed’ from the Austrian capital’s collective memory
VIENNA (AFP) — Fueling Vienna’s golden age before being driven out by the Nazis, the Rothschilds seemed to have closed the Austria chapter of their Jewish banking family’s saga.
That is until Thursday when Geoffrey Hoguet, a member of Europe’s most famous banking dynasty, marches into court in Vienna.
His suit revolves around a foundation set up in 1907 with the funds of his great-great uncle Nathaniel Freiherr von Rothschild who left the equivalent of about 100 million euros ($110 million) when he died in 1905 to provide psychiatric help for the needy.
Hoguet, a 69-year-old New York investor, is accusing the city of appropriating the foundation in breach of its founder’s will and “perpetuating” Nazi-era laws.
Austrian troops marching into Hero’s Square in Vienna, Austria, March 14, 1938. (AP)
At stake is, among others, a neurological hospital dating from 1912 whose elegant period architecture makes it stand out in a 230-hectare (300-acres) park on the capital’s outskirts.
The lawyer for Vienna argues that the 1956 restoration of the foundation was done “in agreement and according to the initial wishes” of Nathaniel von Rothschild following its dissolution by the Nazis in 1938.
But Hoguet — a financial supporter of Democratic Party presidential nominee Pete Buttigieg — sees this differently and wants to “honor the legacy” of his great-great uncle, according to his entourage quoted by the press.
Read more here…. https://www.timesofisrael.com/rothschild-lawsuit-draws-attention-to-familys-vienna-past/