The Polish ruling party uses the terms “law” and “justice” in its name.

Everyday life shows, however, that the law does not create justice in every individual case, and not only in Poland.

The administrative act that the government in Warsaw has now cast in the form of a law has probably come about in accordance with the law.

And from a Polish-national perspective, the statute of limitations on the claims of expropriated persons is certainly also an act that creates legal certainty for today's owners.

But, once again, the government did not want to see that such a law also had a moral-symbolic component.

Much of it is about property that used to belong to Jewish families who were murdered by Germans.

The communist government nationalized these “abandoned” values ​​after the Second World War.

Former owners are no longer allowed to make claims.

Here, then, shows a government that has taken office to eradicate (alleged) relics of the communist past of its country with stump and stem, all of a sudden quite pragmatic.

If it pleases, measures of the communists are gladly accepted.

It is not so important to the narrow-minded nationalists that this is a heavy burden on relations with Israel. For PiS, the world still ends at the Polish border. This is a tragedy.