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2012-01-23

Prof. Elie Wiesel receives the doctoris honoris causa title

The Senate of the University of Warsaw has adopted the resolution to award the doctoris honoris causa title to Prof. Elie Wiesel. The awarding ceremony is scheduled for May this year. Prof. Wiesel’s doctoris honoris causa was supervised by Prof. Samsonowicz, while Wojciech Wrzesiński, Richard Pipes and Bishop Tadeusz Pieronek became the reviewers.

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Elie Wiesel was born into an Orthodox Chasidic family in the Romanian town of Sygiet in 1928. In 1944, all Jewish residents of the town were shipped to the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp, where Elie’s mother and a younger sister were killed. Afterwards, Wiesel was a prisoner at the Buchenwald camp, from where his two elder sisters and he were liberated in 1945 by allied troops.

After the end of the war, seventeen-year-old Wiesel settled in Paris, where he took up literature, psychology and philosophy studies at the Sorbonne University. Additionally, he became engaged in journalism, co-operating with French and Israeli periodicals. In 1963, he assumed American citizenship. At American universities, he gave thousands of lectures, which focused on the situation of Jews and other nations suffering persecutions due to their confession, race or origin. He was a lecturer at the New York City College and at Boston University, where he was awarded professorial titles in humanities and philosophy. He was honored with the doctoris honoris cause title by many universities, and in 1990 he was named the Chevalier of the French Legion of Honor.

Elie Wiesel is a recognized human rights defender and the creator of the term ‘Holocaust’, which denotes the annihilation of Jews during World War II. He was engaged in defending oppressed and persecuted ethnic minorities many times. For his involvement, he received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1986. Wiesel is referred to as the ‘messenger of humanity”. From 1980-1986, Wiesel headed the American Holocaust Memorial Council. He gave the incentive to build the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. In 2008, he was honored the doctoris honoris causa title by the University of Gdansk. He is also a receiver of the Jan Karski Eagle Prize for ‘the lesson of how to identify the absolute evil of the Holocaust’.

Source: PAP

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