Chattanooga Times Free Press

Official dig fails to unearth WWII loot

- BY ALEKSANDAR FURTULA AND MIKE CORDER

OMMEREN, Netherland­s — An officially sanctioned hunt for a stash of jewelry looted by the Nazis during World War II and purportedl­y buried in a sleepy Dutch village has failed to unearth any treasure.

Archeologi­sts and historians called into the village of Ommeren, about 50 miles southeast of Amsterdam, pushed a detection device called a magnetomet­er along a row of fruit trees and across a field Monday morning and used a mechanical digger to excavate the soggy soil.

They were rewarded with little more than a World War II-era bullet, some twisted scrap metal, a crumpled car wheel and muddy boots.

Municipal officials hope the failure of the team to find treasure will put an end to amateur sleuths visiting the village.

“I think there’s minimal chance of finding anything. We dug three holes here of places where we could find through the magnetomet­er. There was a signal, and none of these holes have found the treasure,” said archeologi­st Martijn Bink. “So I think this is all what we’ll do. We won’t go any further.”

The local municipali­ty helped fund the latest search after the publicatio­n early this year of a handdrawn map with a red letter X supposedly marking the spot where Nazi troops buried jewelry stolen from a blown-up bank vault.

The appearance of the map sparked a modern-day treasure hunt, with prospector­s digging up sites around Ommeren despite a ban.

“A lot of people came digging here … without permission. Caused a lot of inconvenie­nce for the residents,” said Pieter Neven of Buren municipali­ty.

The treasure hunts began after the Dutch National Archive published a mountain of documents including the map, which swiftly went viral.

“We’re quite astonished about the story itself. But the attention it’s getting … as well,” National Archive researcher Annet Waalkens said in January.

She said the story started in the summer of 1944 in the Nazi-occupied city of Arnhem when a bomb smashed a bank vault, scattering gold, jewelry and cash across a street.

German forces scooped up as much loot as they could and kept it in ammunition boxes, she said, citing an account by a German soldier interviewe­d after the war. As the Germans were pushed back by an Allied advance, they buried the ammunition boxes in Ommeren, according to the soldier’s account.

 ?? AP PHOTO/ALEKSANDAR FURTULA ?? On Monday, a mechanical digger works on a site where Nazi loot was reportedly buried in Ommeren, near Arnhem, the Netherland­s.
AP PHOTO/ALEKSANDAR FURTULA On Monday, a mechanical digger works on a site where Nazi loot was reportedly buried in Ommeren, near Arnhem, the Netherland­s.

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