Books > History > European history > From 1900 > Second World War > The Holocaust
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Imperfect Justice - Looted Assets, Slave Labor, and the Unfinished Business of World War II (Paperback)
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Imperfect Justice - Looted Assets, Slave Labor, and the Unfinished Business of World War II (Paperback)
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In the second half of the 1990s, Stuart Eizenstat was perhaps the
most controversial U.S. foreign policy official in Europe. His
mission had nothing to do with Russia, the Middle East, Yugoslavia,
or any of the other hotspots of the day. Rather, Eizenstat's
mission was to provide justice,albeit belated and imperfect
justice,for the victims of World War II. Imperfect Justice is
Eizenstat's account of how the Holocaust became a political and
diplomatic battleground fifty years after the war's end, as the
issues of dormant bank accounts, slave labour, confiscated
property, looted art, and unpaid insurance policies convulsed
Europe and America. He recounts the often heated negotiations with
the Swiss, the Germans, the French, the Austrians, and various
Jewish organizations, showing how these moral issues, shunted aside
for so long, exposed wounds that had never healed and conflicts
that had never been properly resolved. Though we will all continue
to reckon with the crimes of World War II for a long time to come,
Eizenstat's account shows that it is still possible to take
positive steps in the service of justice.
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