During the
German occupation, its property was seized by the
Reichsleiter Rosenberg Taskforce or ERR. In 1941 Bernheim-Jeune was sequestered, paintings confiscated and their buildings sold. Like other Jewish families such as
Réné Gimpel,
Adolphe Schloss,
Anna Jaffé,
Raoul Meyer,
Armand Dorville,
Alfred Lindon,
David David-Weill,
Alphonse Kann,
Paul Rosenberg, Bernheim had to labor for several decades to recover some of the paintings, the task made more difficult as two record ledgers had disappeared from the gallery during the looting. In 1940 sensing that they, of Jewish background, would be targeted by the Nazis, the Bernheim-Jeune family had sent 30 or so impressionist and post-impressionist paintings to the
Château de Rastignac in
Dordogne for safekeeping. On March 30, 1944, fleeing Nazi
Schutzstaffel (SS) forces set fire to the château, after five truckloads of items were removed; the paintings may have been destroyed. The son of Gaston and Suzanne Bernheim, Claude Bernheim dit Bernheim de Villers (September 15, 1902 – 1944), was arrested and deported in 1943 to his death at
Auschwitz. == Postwar ==