Book Review
A Lucky Child by Thomas Buergenthal
Elie Wiesel, fwd. Little, Brown and Company: 2009. Pp xvi, 228. $24.99.
This memoir by the late Thomas Buergenthal (1934-2023), a Judge in the International Court of Justice in The Hague as well as in several other human rights courts, tells how his survival of Auschwitz which he entered at age 10 after surviving two ghettos and a labor camp influenced his long career as a stellar human rights lawyer and advocate. As the Amazon book description concludes: "A Lucky Child is a book that demands to be read by all."
"It was more than luck and the good fortune of his “Aryan” features that enabled him to survive the war — it was his strength, wisdom, and enormous faith that he would one day survive and be reunited with his parents. Amazingly, Thomas was reunited with his mother shortly after the war and then moved to the United States and began a career as lawyer and then as a judge. He has dedicated his career to fighting against the human rights violations that he experienced as a child."
*****
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(4) Photo courtesy of Amazon.com.