Yesterday a federal district court in Washington, D.C. gave a significant-- but not total-- victory to a Chabad organization in its efforts to get back collections of its Jewish religious books and manuscripts that fell into the hands of the Soviet Union during the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution and then were the subject of extensive legal proceedings in the Soviet Union. In Agudas Chasidei Chabad of United States v. Russian Federation, (DDC, Dec. 4, 2006), the court held that the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act is not a bar to Chabad's suit to recover the so-called "Archive"-- 25,000 pages of Chabad Rebbes' handwritten teachings, correspondence, and other records. The expropriation exception to FSIA applies because the Archive was taken in violation of international law by the Nazis in Poland during World War II, and then seized by the Soviet Army from the Nazis in 1945, again in violation of international law.
However the court did dismiss Chabad's attempt to also recover its "Library" -- a collection of 12,000 books and 382 manuscripts that date back to 1772. Both FSIA and the act of state doctrine preclude the court from having jurisdiction over this claim because taking of the Library, which took place in the 1920s, did not violate international law.
The New York Sun and the Associated Press cover the decision. The AP report says that Chabad is delighted with the decision. Its main concern was the Archive. The Library apparently is being preserved in Russia by the Russian government under an agreement it made with the U.S. in 1993, though Chabad charges that Russia is not complying with its obligations under the agreement. Bloomberg yesterday, however, reported that Chabad is considering whether to appeal this part of the court's decision