Hessel, Stéphane
Enlarge text Shrink text- France. Groupe de travail Immigration. Immigrations, le devoir d'insertion, c1988:t.p. (Stéphane Hessel, président [du Groupe de travail Immigration])
- Dix pas dans le nouveau siècle, c2002:t.p. (Stéphane Hessel) p. 4 of cover (b. Berlin, 1917)
- New York times WWW site, Feb. 28, 2013(in obituary published Feb. 27: Stéphane Hessel; b. 1917, Berlin; d. Tuesday [Feb. 26, 2013], Paris, aged 95; hero of the French Resistance who, more than 60 years later as a nonagenarian, marshaled the same defiant spirit in a manifesto that inspired social protesters in Europe and the United States and became an international publishing phenomenon)
Stéphane Frédéric Hessel (born Stefan Friedrich Kaspar Hessel; 20 October 1917 – 26 February 2013) was a French diplomat, ambassador, writer, concentration camp survivor, Resistance member and BCRA agent. Born German, he became a naturalised French citizen in 1939. He became an observer of the editing of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights of 1948. In 2011 he was named by Foreign Policy magazine in its list of top global thinkers. In later years his activism focused on economic inequalities, the Israeli–Palestinian conflict and protection for the post–World War II social vision. His short book Time for Outrage! sold 4.5 million copies worldwide. Hessel and his book were linked and cited as an inspiration for the Spanish Indignados, the Arab Spring, the American Occupy Wall Street movement and other political movements.
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