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Bevat de naam: Thomas Buergenthal

Fotografie: Courtesy of Allen & Unwin.

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Algemene kennis

Geboortedatum
1934-05-11
Overlijdensdatum
2023-05-29
Geslacht
male
Nationaliteit
Czechoslovakia
Slovakia
Geboorteplaats
Ľubochňa, Czechoslovakia
Woonplaatsen
Kielce, Poland
Lubochna, Slovakia
Opleiding
Bethany College
New York University Law School
Harvard Law School
Beroepen
lawyer
law school professor
jurist
Holocaust survivor
memoirist
Organisaties
International Court of Justice
George Washington University Law School
Prijzen en onderscheidingen
Gruber Prize for Justice (2008)
Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany (Grand Cross, 2016)
Korte biografie
Thomas Buergenthal er dommer i Den internasjonale domstolen i Haag og en av verdens fremste internasjonale jurister og menneskerettsforkjempere.

Thomas Buergenthal er født i 1934 i den slovakiske landsbyen Lubochna. Etter krigen studerte han jus ved New York University og Harvard, der han spesialiserte seg på internasjonal rett og menneskerettigheter. Han har vært professor ved en rekke velrenommerte universiteter, han har hatt en rekke høye akademiske verv og mottatt mange priser. Fra 1979 til 1991 var han dommer i den Inter-amerikanske domstolen for menneskerettigheter i Costa Rica. Fra 1992 til 1993 var han medlem av FNs sannhetskommisjon for El Salvador. Mellom 1995 og 1999 satt han i FNs menneskerettighetskomite. Fra år 2000 er han dommer i Den internasjonale domstolen i Haag. Han har skrevet en rekke bøker og artikler om internasjonal rett og menneskerettigheter.

Thomas Buergenthal was born to a German Jewish family that had moved to Lubochna, Czechoslovakia to try to escape the Nazi regime in Germany. His parents were Gerda (Silbergleit) and Mundek Buergenthal, a lawyer-banker. In 1938, Slovak soldiers who sided with Hitler took over the family's small hotel and the Buergenthals fled to the nearby city of Zilina, where they stayed until Thomas was five years old. Then his father took them across the border into Poland. On September 1, 1939, they boarded a train heading for a boat they hoped would take them to England. But that day, the German Army invaded Poland, and their train was bombed. Joining other refugees, they walked north to Kielce, Poland. Buergenthal spent his childhood in the Kielce Ghetto and in the Nazi concentration camps at Auschwitz and Sachsenhausen. With the help of a few adults, he survived to be liberated by the Red Army in 1945. His father and grandparents died in the Holocaust. After the war, he was smuggled out of eastern Europe to Germany, where he was reunited with his mother. In 1952, at age 17, he went to the USA and studied law at New York University and Harvard University, specializing in international law and human rights. He became a professor of law at a number of prestigious universities, the dean of Washington College of Law at American University, and one of the world's foremost international lawyers and defenders of human rights. From 1979 to 1991, he was a judge of the Inter-American Human Rights Court in Costa Rica. From 1992 to 1993, he was a member of the United Nations Truth Commission for El Salvador. Between 1995 and 1999, he was on the U.N. Human Rights Committee. From 2000 to 2010, he served a judge in the International Court of Justice in The Hague. He wrote a number of foundational books and articles on international law and human rights. His memoir, A Lucky Child: A Memoir of Surviving Auschwitz as a Young Boy, was published in 2009.

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Besprekingen

A los diez años ya había sobrevivido a dos guetos, el campo de exterminio de Auschwitz y el de Sachsenhausen, y a la terrible "marcha de la muerte" de 1945. El número tatuado en su brazo B-2930 forma parte de su vida. "No me quiero borrar el número. Nunca quise. Es parte de mi vida, es mi identidad." La vida de Thomas Buergenthal, "el juez que fue víctima", ha sido un duro camino desde que nació en 1934, de padres judíos alemanes, hasta convertirse en juez de la Corte Internacional de Justicia en el año 2000. Entre estas dos fechas, sobrevivió a los campos nazis, se educó en Estados Unidos y se dedicó al derecho internacional y a la defensa de los derechos humanos. Su autobiografía es un claro homenaje a las poderosas palabras de su padre: "No desesperar bajo ningún concepto". El pequeño Buergenthal hace suyas estas palabras y conserva, con inmensa voluntad de sobrevivir, su vida y sus principios, sin sucumbir a la tentación del odio ni al cinismo. Los campos de exterminio no sólo no lo quebraron, sino que lo convirtieron en una persona que buscará siempre la justicia y el respeto de los derechos humanos. Un niño afortunado es una obra de una humanidad, lucidez, ternura y tolerancia excepcionales. Sus reflexiones sobre las circunstancias que permitieron su supervivencia son de una calidad humana extraordinaria.… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
Natt90 | 1 andere bespreking | Feb 7, 2023 |
For being about the horrors of Nazi occupation of Europe and the Holocaust, this wasn't a difficult read. The author, Thomas Buergenthal, writes about his childhood in an approachable manner. It probably helps that he's writing it several decades after the fact - the pain and anger he would have felt during and immediately after the events have had time to heal. It's light on details of the day-to-day activities of those years, as he and his family were first on the run from Germans, then living in the Jewish ghetto in Poland, then the various concentration camps he was imprisoned in. As a result, it glosses over a lot of the horrors, focusing instead on events that stick out to him most - but those events are rather harrowing in themselves. He doesn't linger on them though. Some might find this lack of detail frustrating, others may be relieved. I've read other accounts of the Holocaust, most memorably Elie Wiesel's [b:Night|1617|Night (The Night Trilogy, #1)|Elie Wiesel|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1473495285s/1617.jpg|265616], so I was able to fill in what wasn't there.

This felt like a very honest and intimate account of his days surviving WWII and the Holocaust. His writing here is flowing and stark, and he doesn't get bogged down with unnecessary repetition like last few autobiographies I've read. He was indeed a "lucky" child to survive Dr. Mengele and Auschwitz. Speaking of Night, they were both clearly in Auschwitz at the same time, as they both describe the Death March with the same sort of dreadful resignation. He was lucky many other times in order to survive, and that continues even after his liberation as he details how he was eventually reunited with his mother.

One cannot stress enough how important this time period was to the shaping of the world as it is today and why it's necessary that it continue to be taught in our schools. Buergenthal's work in international humanitarian law is inspirational and reminds us that, no matter how bleak things can still appear, there is hope for improvement and that things already have improved in many places. We can make the world a better place, but we can only do that by remembering the atrocities that came before and striving not to repeat them.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
Linda_Bookworm | 1 andere bespreking | May 6, 2021 |
Nothing Dr. Buergenthal could write can make me understand the unbelievable horror he lived through. Clearly, he belongs to that band of children given to be resilient in the face of overwhelming odds.

I was fortunate to hear the professor speak at the installation of Ralph Steinhardt as the new holder of the Loebinger Chair (and recipient of an actual GWLS chair, which Buergenthal humorously pointed out had never been given to him....). His love of living was so apparent in his remarks, I felt compelled to read his memoir.… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
kaulsu | 1 andere bespreking | Jan 20, 2018 |
In this memoir of his life as a young prisoner, Buergenthal adds depth and a thoughtful voice to other stories of the Holocaust you may have read. Buergenthal doesn't diminish the horrors of life in the ghetto or the series of work and concentration camps. Instead, he focuses on the connections, accidental fortunes, and human choices. At several points in the book, Buergenthal offered the reader questions about choices (e.g., why do some people abandon principals or turn on their fellow prisoners?) and perceptions (were the post-war Polish looters different than the Germans?). It is a must read with any other book on the subject.

Pros: Thoughtful and thought provoking, A Lucky Child offers readers a personal story with a universal study of humanity's best (and ugliest) moments.

There's more to our review. Visit The Reading Tub®. While you’re there, add a link to your review of the book.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
TheReadingTub | 39 andere besprekingen | Mar 14, 2016 |

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Statistieken

Werken
14
Leden
960
Populariteit
#26,838
Waardering
4.1
Besprekingen
42
ISBNs
61
Talen
7
Favoriet
1

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