Biography:René Cassin
René Cassin | |
---|---|
René Cassin's portrait from his Nobel Prize | |
Born | René Samuel Cassin Bayonne, Basque Country, France |
Died | 20 February 1976 Paris, France | (aged 88)
Occupation | France jurist, law professor and judge |
Known for | Advocacy for Human Rights |
Notable work | Universal Declaration of Human Rights |
Awards | Nobel Peace Prize (1968) |
René Samuel Cassin (5 October 1887 – 20 February 1976) was a French jurist known for co-authoring the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and receiving the Nobel Peace Prize.
Born in Bayonne, Cassin served as a soldier in the First World War during which he was seriously wounded. He was of Portuguese-Jewish descent.[1]
On 24 June 1940, during the Second World War, Cassin heeded General Charles de Gaulle's radio appeal and joined him in London. Cassin used his legal expertise to help de Gaulle's Free French.
Between 1944 and 1959, Cassin was a member of the Council of State.
Seconded to the UN Commission on Human Rights after the war, he was a major contributor to the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights. For that work, he received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1968. The same year, he was awarded one of the UN General Assembly's Human Rights Prizes.
Early life
Cassin was born in Bayonne on 5 October 1887, to a Sephardi Jewish family.[2] He grew up in Nice, where he attended the Lycée Masséna (fr), and graduated with a bachelor's degree at 17. At the University of Aix he studied political economics, constitutional history, and Roman law and was awarded distinctions in law, a university degree with distinction and the first prize in the competitive examinations in the faculty of law. He was an invited speaker at international peace conferences. In 1914 in Paris, he was awarded his doctorate in juridical science, economics and politics.[3]
First World War
Cassin served in the First World War in 1916 at the Battle of the Meuse. In one operation, he led the attack on enemy positions and was gravely injured in the arm, side and stomach by machine gunfire. A medic saved his life, but he received surgical treatment only ten days later at Antibes. He was awarded the Croix de Guerre for his actions but was too seriously injured to return to active duty,[3] and he was mustered out as a war invalid.[4]
Interwar period
He helped to found the Union fédérale, a leftist pacifist organization for veterans.
Cassin also headed many non-governmental organizations (NGO) and founded the French Federation of Disabled War Veterans in 1918 and served until 1940 as its president and then as its honorary president.
In 1920, Cassin was appointed professor of law at Lille and in 1929 at Paris, where he continued to teach until 1960. In addition, he taught at the Academy of International Law of The Hague, and at the Institut Universitaire des Hautes Etudes Internationales of Geneva, among other places.[5]
As a French delegate to the League of Nations from 1924 to 1938, Cassin pressed for progress on disarmament and for developing institutions to aid the resolution of international conflicts.
Second World War
Refusing the armistice, Cassin embarked on a British ship, the SS Ettrick, in Saint-Jean-de-Luz on 24 June 1940, and joined General Charles de Gaulle in London to help him continue the war against Germany. Cassin was, therefore, one of the first to join de Gaulle.[6][page needed] De Gaulle needed legal help to draft the statutes of Free France and so Cassin's arrival in London was very welcome.[7]
René Cassin did not speak English but already knew leading academics and political figures like British Foreign Minister Anthony Eden.[8]
In April 1941, Cassin made a radio broadcast from London by addressing himself especially to French Jews from a secular viewpoint and reminding them of the full and equal protection that France had always offered to Jews since the French Revolution . He exhorted them to help pay back that debt by joining the forces of Free France. In May, Vichy France stripped Cassin of his French citizenship and in 1942 sentenced him to death in absentia.[9]
Later life and career
After the war, Cassin was assigned to the United Nations to help draft the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Working from a list of rights elaborated by the Canadian scholar and professor of law John Humphrey, Cassin produced a revised draft and expanded the text.[10]
He served on the UN Human Rights Commission and the Hague Court of Arbitration.
He was also a member (1959–1965) and president (1965–1968) of the European Court of Human Rights. The court building is now on Allée René Cassin, in Strasbourg.[citation needed]
In 1945, General de Gaulle suggested for Cassin, having done so much for the French people, to do something also to help the Jewish people. Cassin became the president of the French-Jewish Alliance Israelite Universelle (AIU) which had been dedicated primarily to educating Sephardi Jews living in the Ottoman Empire according to a modern French curriculum. As president of the AIU, Cassin worked with the American Jewish Committee and the Anglo-Jewish Association to found the Consultative Council of Jewish Organisations, a network dedicated to building support for Cassin's platform of human rights from a Jewish perspective[clarification needed] while the UN human rights system was in its early stages of development.[11][page needed]
In 1947, Cassin created the French Institute of Administrative Sciences (IFSA). He was the first president of the association, which organized many conferences to help to develop the French doctrine in administrative law.[clarification needed]
On 10 November 1950, he was photographed at a UN radio, alongside Karim Azkoul, Georges Day and Herald CL Roy, participating in a roundtable discussion for the use of French-speaking countries. That is perhaps all the more interesting because Azkoul and Cassin differed so strongly in their perspectives concerning the politics of Zionism.[12]
Cassin died in Paris in 1976 and was initially interred at the Montparnasse Cemetery in Paris. In 1987, his remains were exhumed and enshrined in the crypt of the Pantheon in Paris.
Legacy
In 2001, the CCJO René Cassin was founded in Cassin's memory to promote universal human rights from a Jewish perspective.
The René Cassin Medal is awarded by the CCJO to those who have made an outstanding global contribution to human rights. As the head of the Alliance Israélite in France, Cassin had pursued civil rights for the Jews and was an active Zionist.[citation needed]
A high school in Jerusalem is named after him.[citation needed] [13]
In 2003, the Basque government created the René Cassin Award "with the goal of publicly acknowledging and rewarding individuals or collectives that, through their personal or professional path, showed a strong commitment to the promotion, defence and divulgation of Human Rights". The award is given on 10 December, which is International Human Rights Day.[14]
See also
- International Institute of Human Rights
- List of Jewish Nobel laureates
- List of peace activists
References
- ↑ Adams, Geoffrey (6 November 2006). Catholics, Jews and Protestants in De Gaulle's free France. McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP. ISBN 9780773576667. https://books.google.com/books?id=5QeF34Z3ae0C&dq=rabbin+Honel&pg=PA69.
- ↑ "René Cassin » Making the Jewish Case for Human Rights – Monsieur René Cassin". 26 February 2019. https://www.renecassin.org/making-the-jewish-case-monsieur-rene-cassin/#:~:text=Ren%C3%A9%20Cassin%20was%20born%20in,to%20peace%20and%20human%20rights..
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Union Fédérale 2016.
- ↑ Haberman 1972, p. 386.
- ↑ "Cassin, René Samuel". https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/cassin-ren-x00e9-samuel.
- ↑ Crémieux-Brilhac 1996.
- ↑ Glendon 2001, p. 62.
- ↑ René Cassin, l'inconnu du Panthéon
- ↑ Glendon 2001, p. 63.
- ↑ Glendon 2001, p. 62–65.
- ↑ Winter 2012.
- ↑ Photo/MB, UN (1950-11-10). "Round Table Discussion over U.N. Radio". http://www.unmultimedia.org/s/photo/detail/167/0167670.html.
- ↑ "Rene Cassin Darca, Jerusalem". https://darca.org.il/en/rene-cassin-darca-jerusalem/.
- ↑ "Premio René Cassin". 2 October 2014. http://www.lehendakaritza.ejgv.euskadi.net/informacion/premio-rene-cassin/r48-pazconte/es/.
Works cited
- Crémieux-Brilhac, Jean-Louis (1996) (in fr). La France libre: de l'appel du 18 juin à la Libération. La suite des temps. Gallimard. ISBN 978-2-07-073032-2. OCLC 889439434. https://books.google.com/books?id=2o2mQgAACAAJ.
- Glendon, Mary Ann (2001). A World Made New: Eleanor Roosevelt and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. London: Random House. ISBN 978-0-375-76046-4. OCLC 1011165627. https://books.google.com/books?id=PHI5XTOi4gUC&pg=PA62.
- Haberman, Frederick W.; Nobelstiftelsen (1972). Peace: 1951-1970. Elsevier Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0-444-41010-8. OCLC 500252296. https://books.google.com/books?id=2VybAAAAMAAJ.
- "Hommage à René Cassin - Union Fédérale". 2016-05-18. https://union-federale.com/presentation/hommage-a-rene-cassin/.
- Winter, Jay (8 February 2012). "René Cassin and the Alliance Israelite Universelle". Modern Judaism 32 (1): 1–21. doi:10.1093/mj/kjr028. ISSN 0276-1114. OCLC 785309079.
External links
- Miss nobel-id as parameter including the Nobel Lecture, 11 December 1968 The Charter of Human Rights
- CCJO.RenéCassin Human Rights Group
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- 1901: [[Biography:Henry DunHenry Dunant / Frédéric Passy
- 1902: Élie Ducommun / Charles Gobat
- 1903: Randal Cremer
- 1904: Institut de Droit International
- 1905: Bertha von Suttner
- 1906: Theodore Roosevelt
- 1907: Ernesto Moneta / Louis Renault
- 1908: Klas Arnoldson / Fredrik Bajer
- 1909: A. M. F. Beernaert / Paul Estournelles de Constant
- 1910: International Peace Bureau
- 1911: Tobias Asser / Alfred Fried
- 1912: Elihu Root
- 1913: Henri La Fontaine
- 1914
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- 1917: International Committee of the Red Cross
- 1918
- 1919: Woodrow Wilson
- 1920: Léon Bourgeois
- 1921: Hjalmar Branting / Christian Lange
- 1922: Fridtjof Nansen
- 1923
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- 1925: Austen Chamberlain / Charles Dawes
| group2 = 1926–1950 | list2 =
- 1926: Aristide Briand / Gustav Stresemann
- 1927: Ferdinand Buisson / Ludwig Quidde
- 1928
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- 1930: Nathan Söderblom
- 1931: Jane Addams / Nicholas Butler
- 1932
- 1933: Norman Angell
- 1934: Arthur Henderson
- 1935: Carl von Ossietzky
- 1936: Carlos Saavedra Lamas
- 1937: Robert Cecil
- 1938: Nansen International Office for Refugees
- 1939
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- 1941
- 1942
- 1943
- 1944: International Committee of the Red Cross
- 1945: Cordell Hull
- 1946: Emily Balch / John Mott
- 1947: Friends Service Council / American Friends Service Committee
- 1948
- 1949: John Boyd Orr
- 1950: Ralph Bunche
| group3 = 1951–1975 | list3 =
- 1951: Léon Jouhaux
- 1952: Albert Schweitzer
- 1953: George Marshall
- 1954: United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
- 1955
- 1956
- 1957: Lester B. Pearson
- 1958: Georges Pire
- 1959: Philip Noel-Baker
- 1960: Albert Lutuli
- 1961: Dag Hammarskjöld
- 1962: Linus Pauling
- 1963: International Committee of the Red Cross / League of Red Cross Societies
- 1964: Martin Luther King Jr.
- 1965: UNICEF
- 1966
- 1967
- 1968: René Cassin
- 1969: International Labour Organization
- 1970: Norman Borlaug
- 1971: Willy Brandt
- 1972
- 1973: Lê Đức Thọ (declined award) / Henry Kissinger
- 1974: Seán MacBride / Eisaku Satō
- 1975: Andrei Sakharov
| group4 = 1976–2000 | list4 =
- 1976: Betty Williams / Mairead Corrigan
- 1977: Amnesty International
- 1978: [[Biography:Anwar SaAnwar Sadat{{\}}Menachem Begin
- 1979: Mother Teresa
- 1980: Adolfo Pérez Esquivel
- 1981: United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
- 1982: Alva Myrdal / Alfonso García Robles
- 1983: Lech Wałęsa
- 1984: Desmond Tutu
- 1985: International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War
- 1986: Elie Wiesel
- 1987: Óscar Arias
- 1988: UN Peacekeeping Forces
- 1989: Tenzin Gyatso (14th Dalai Lama)
- 1990: Mikhail Gorbachev
- 1991: Aung San Suu Kyi
- 1992: Rigoberta Menchú
- 1993: Nelson Mandela / F. W. de Klerk
- 1994: Shimon Peres / Yitzhak Rabin / Yasser Arafat
- 1995: Pugwash Conferences / Joseph Rotblat
- 1996: Carlos Belo / José Ramos-Horta
- 1997: International Campaign to Ban Landmines / Jody Williams
- 1998: John Hume / David Trimble
- 1999: Médecins Sans Frontières
- 2000: Kim Dae-jung
| group5 = 2001–present | list5 =
- 2001: United Nations / Kofi Annan
- 2002: Jimmy Carter
- 2003: Shirin Ebadi
- 2004: Wangari Maathai
- 2005: International Atomic Energy Agency / Mohamed ElBaradei
- 2006: Grameen Bank / Muhammad Yunus
- 2007: Al Gore / Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
- 2008: Martti Ahtisaari
- 2009: Barack Obama
- 2010: Liu Xiaobo
- 2011: Ellen Johnson Sirleaf / Leymah Gbowee / Tawakkol Karman
- 2012: European Union
- 2013: Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons
- 2014: Kailash Satyarthi / Malala Yousafzai
- 2015: Tunisian National Dialogue Quartet
- 2016: Juan Manuel Santos
- 2017: International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons
- 2018: Denis Mukwege / Nadia Murad
- 2019: Abiy Ahmed
}}
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/René Cassin.
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