The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has returned nearly two dozen objects looted from Okinawa, Japan, during World War II. The restitution was announced by the bureau, which worked with the U.S. Defense Department and the Smithsonian Institution to investigate the looted artifacts and return them to Japan.
The FBI began the investigation in January 2023 after a Massachusetts family, which was not identified, first found some of the valuable artworks among their deceased father’s possessions in the attic of his house. Their father never served in Japan but was a World War II veteran.
The bureau did not provide information about who stole the artifacts and how they ended up in the possession of the family, but said the artifacts were found with a typed message outlining in detail how the artifacts were collected in Okinawa. Special Agent Geoffrey Kelly, the art theft coordinator for the Boston field office, called it the “Rosetta Stone” for his investigation.
“There were some scrolls, there were some pottery pieces, there was an ancient map. They looked old and valuable. And because of this, [the family] did a little research and they determined that at least the scrolls had been entered about 20 years ago in the FBI’s National Stolen Art File,” Kelly said.
Okinawa’s Prefectural Board of Education had registered many of the 22 looted items with the National Stolen Art File in 2001. Altogether, the FBI recovered six painted scrolls dated to the 18th and 19th centuries, as well as a hand-drawn map of Okinawa and various ceramics.
“When taken together, they really represent a substantial piece of Okinawan history,” Kelly said.
After their recovery by the FBI, the items were transferred to the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of Asian Art in Washington, D.C., where they were examined and prepared for proper shipment. Colonel Scott DeJesse and soldiers with the U.S. Army’s famed Monuments Men and Women transported the artifacts to Japan.
The artifacts were handed over to Japanese officials in a ceremony on March 15. A formal repatriation ceremony will be held in Japan at a later date.
“I think one of the biggest takeaways from this entire investigation is the fact that in this case, the family did the right thing,” Kelly said. “They had some questioned artifacts that they thought might not belong here in this country. They checked the National Stolen Art File. And when they realized that they may have been looted cultural property, they did what they should have done, which is call the FBI. And we’re very grateful for them for all the assistance they gave us.”