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Interview: Thomas Buergenthal

Twitter might have prevented the Holocaust

February 23, 2012 11:59
Buergenthal miraculously survived the Holocaust, and went on to preside over the trials of human-rights abusers

By

Simon Round,

Simon Round

5 min read

Thomas Buergenthal believes in justice. This is not just heartwarming but remarkable because this is a man who has witnessed some of the most depraved behaviour in human history. As a child, he survived the Kielce Ghetto in Poland; he survived Auschwitz; he survived the death march to Germany, and he survived the Sachsenhausen death camp where he was ultimately liberated by the Polish army in 1945.

After being miraculously reunited with his mother after the war, Buergenthal settled with in the United States, where the second part of his life began - as a human rights lawyer and ultimately a judge at the International Court at the Hague. In his professional life, he has presided over cases of genocide and multiple human-rights abuses. That he felt able to do what he did given what he went through is also remarkable. But Buergenthal (now 77 and retired as a judge) felt it was his duty.

We sit in his London hotel lobby. Buergenthal is not feeling well and tells me he considered cancelling our interview. However, once he gets into his stride, his strength seems to return and he speaks fluently and persuasively in his softly spoken German-American English.

He explains his motivation: "Having survived I wanted to try to ensure that it didn't happen to other people. I trained as a lawyer partly because my father had and partly because I realised that I would never make a scientist or a physician. Gradually I realised that because of my language background and what I knew about the world, I could make a contribution to international law. I got my law degree in 1960 when things were beginning to stir - at around the time of the European Convention of Human Rights. I was fascinated to see what would happen. Could it prevent genocide? Before I knew it, I was an expert in the field, mainly because there weren't that many people who knew much about it."

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