The eviction cases being blamed for Jerusalem violence are rooted in a basic principle, no matter what the critics say.
It is now 75 years since the Second World War ended and nearly 80 since the Nazi period began. Yet year after year, justice is done when works of art seized from Jews who were killed, driven from their homes, or forced to sell their possessions at small fractions of their value are restored to their real owners — or to the descendants of those owners.
The principle is not controversial: Title to the property in question was not legally obtained, and just compensation was not paid. Governments and courts in the United States and Europe year after year decide these cases, giving title to the original owner.
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