National Socialism: Benjamin Ferencz dead: chief prosecutor at Nuremberg trials

National Socialism
Benjamin Ferencz dead: chief prosecutor at Nuremberg trials

Benjamin Ferencz was not even 30 years old when he tried war criminals in Nuremberg. photo

© Armin Weigel/dpa

He was the last surviving prosecutor at the Nuremberg war crimes trials. The US lawyer Benjamin Ferencz has died at the age of 103.

The chief prosecutor at the Nuremberg war crimes trials, Benjamin Ferencz, is dead. He died on Friday in a Florida care facility, as reported by US media, citing his son Don Ferencz. The last surviving prosecutor of the trials was 103 years old. “The world has lost a leader in the fight for justice for victims of genocide and related crimes,” the US Holocaust Museum wrote on Twitter.

Ferencz was born in 1920 in what was then Hungarian Transylvania as the son of orthodox Jews and emigrated to the USA with his parents as a child. He grew up in modest circumstances in New York and later studied at the elite Harvard University thanks to a scholarship. The lawyer was not even 30 years old when he tried Nazi war criminals in Nuremberg.

From November 20, 1945, leading National Socialists, and thus for the first time in history representatives of an unjust regime, had to answer in court in Nuremberg. The victorious Allied powers tried 21 high-ranking war criminals such as Adolf Hitler’s deputy Rudolf Hess and Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring before an international court. The trial ended after almost a year with twelve death sentences.

“Obstetrician” of the International Criminal Court

Ferencz was chief prosecutor in one of the twelve so-called follow-up trials that followed the trial of the major war criminals from 1946 to 1949. He accused 24 leading SS men of crimes against humanity and war crimes, among other things. Before the trials, he served as a US soldier in the liberation of several concentration camps. The atonement for the German war crimes became the main theme of his life.

However, the historical role of the lawyer goes beyond the significance of the war crimes trials of the time. Because Ferencz not only inserted the term “genocide” into court practice, he is also considered one of the midwives of the International Criminal Court. In 2009, at the age of almost 90, he symbolically opened the prosecution’s first pleadings in The Hague.

“Ben’s enduring quest for a more peaceful and just world spanned nearly eight decades and forever defined the way we respond to mankind’s worst crimes,” said the director of the US Holocaust Museum. “He made history at Nuremberg and continued to do so throughout his extraordinary life.”

dpa

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