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 5/9/2008

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Prosecuting for Peace
The Nuremberg Trial
The Nuremberg Trial

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The landscape of Benjamin Ferencz's life is dotted with the landmarks of the Second World War. Normandy. The Battle of the Bulge. Hitler's Lair and Buchenwald. In 1943, as a newly minted graduate of Harvard Law School, Ferencz enlisted in Patton's army and became one of the soldiers who'd go on to defeat the Germans. Ferencz's job description eventually went from fighting to ferreting.

Collecting evidence and making records of Nazi war crimes. At times, that meant digging up corpses with his own hands. By 1947, Ferencz was a prosecutor at Nuremberg. He was 27 years old. Today, he says, Nuremberg's legacy is alive in the fledgling International Criminal Court, and America should pay heed. International justice then...and now.
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Related Links

Benjamin B. Ferencz Website

The NurembergWar Crimes Trials, Avalon Project at Yale

Photos from the Nuremberg trials
 



Benjamin Ferencz, U.S. Prosecutor at Nuremberg Trials

Benjamen Ferencz describes how he got started working on War Crimes. listen
Benjamen Frerencz, "Ours was a plea of humanity to law." listen
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