|
1901 2012
Prize category:
|
The Nobel Peace Prize 1963
International Committee of the Red Cross , League of Red Cross Societies
The Nobel Peace Prize 1963
Nobel Peace Prize Award Ceremony
International Committee of the Red Cross
League of Red Cross Societies
Award Ceremony Speech
Presentation Speech by Carl Joachim Hambro*, Member of the Nobel Committee
The Nobel
Committee of the Norwegian Storting [Parliament] has decided
to divide the Peace Prize for 1963 between the two sister
organizations of the Red Cross: the International Red Cross
Committee and the League of Red Cross Societies.
It is most appropriate that such a decision should be taken this
year, for it marks the centennial of the Red Cross. That it
should have been possible to constitute the Red Cross and start
its work in 1863 is one of the great miracles in human
history.
It was after the French-Sardinian-Austrian war and on the
background of the terrible massacres on the battlefields of
northern Italy that the Red Cross came into existence. On June
24, 1859, 300,000 French, Sardinian, and Austrian soldiers fought
at Solferino in northern Italy, the most merciless battle of the
war; and more than 40,000 dying, dead, and wounded were herded
into the little village of Castiglione. There was no organized
medical aid and no medical supplies, and there was no water. The
heat was suffocating; and in this hell on earth an idealistic and
pious young Swiss businessman from Geneva, Henri Dunant (he was later called by
Dickens "the man in white" and repeated the words which Dunant
adopted: Tutti fratelli. We are all brothers.), worked day and
night among the dead and the dying and pressed into his service
every man and woman of the neighorhood. The Italian peasant women
came to his aid and helped even the enemies.
Dunant had come to Italy for a conference with Napoleon1, but followed the call of his heart and
conscience.
The earlier decades of the nineteenth century had seen wars in
every country of Europe, and from the days of the disasters of
the great French armies, the minds of statesmen and soldiers were
busy with the idea of how to prevent wars and how to fight the
disorder and disorganization which followed in the wake of
war.
Fifty years before Solferino, General Dobeln, the great hero of
the Swedish war in Finland,2
wrote in his diary: "Happy the country where nothing is regarded
as little things, neither in peace nor in war."
Dunant saw in Castiglione the indescribable suffering that came
as a result of the lack of preparation and the neglect of what
had been regarded as little things; and when later the idea of
the Red Cross was accepted with open hearts in England, it was
because the importance of "the little things " had been
understood as a result of Florence Nightingale's work,3 and there were public meetings very
much like those that were later arranged for the Red Cross. For
such a meeting in 1845 a young English authoress, Miss Craigie,
presented a poem called Little Things,4 which became very popular and was
recited in the schools of England and America and accepted as an
introduction to work for the Red Cross.
Little drops of water,
Little grains of sand,
Make the mighty ocean
And the pleasant land.
Thus the little minutes,
Humble though they be,
Make the mighty ages
Of eternity.
Thus our little errors
Make a mighty sin;
Drop by drop the evil
Floods the heart within.
Little deeds of kindness,
Little words of love,
Make our earth an Eden,
Like the heaven above.
Never have little things given greater
results. Last summer there were Red Cross societies in
eighty-eight countries, with a membership of nearly 170
million.
Henri Dunant had learnt to see the importance of little things,
and when in 1862 he published his book, Un Souvenir de
Solferino, which was a tremendous shock to public opinion in
Europe, he launched the idea to start, before any war broke out,
organizations of peaceful, idealistic women and men to work for
help to the wounded in war, friends and enemies alike. And should
it not be possible to bring about an international convention to
declare that wounded and medical personnel should be regarded as
neutral and under protection of the governments at war? His book
made an impression like that of Uncle Tom's Cabin by
Harriet Beecher Stowe,5 and
stirred the conscience of responsible people all over
Europe.
In his native city of Geneva, La Societe genevoise d'utilite
publique [the Geneva Public Welfare Society] appointed a
committee of five - among whom was Dunant - to make his idea a
reality. And these five private individuals, without any official
status, really succeeded in arranging a conference at Geneva in
October, 1863, in which sixteen countries participated among them
Norway and Sweden. Here the Red Cross was organized, and in honor
of Dunant it adopted as its international emblem the inverted
Swiss flag - the red cross on white.
Until then every country - if it had any organized military
medical service at all - had had its own flag and symbols, and
there was general confusion behind the battlefields.
In 1864, the year after, delegates of twelve states, invited by
the Swiss government on the initiative of the Committee of Five,
met at Geneva and adopted the first Geneva Convention for
protection of sick and wounded in land warfare.
Gradually - and in the early years slowly - the Red Cross became
the mighty institution which it is today.
It is wholly independent of any government and completely
neutral. Its highest authority is the Red Cross Conference which
usually meets every four years and consists of delegates from the
National Red Cross Societies, the International Red Cross
Committee, the League of Red Cross Societies and representatives
of the governments which have signed the Geneva Convention. The
delegation of each national Red Cross has only one vote. The
decisions of the Conference bind the National Red Cross Societies
morally, but the Conference can only give advice and express
wishes.
The first International Red Cross Conference was in Paris in
1867, and the most recent one was in New Delhi in 1957 on the
invitation of the Indian Red Cross.
A permanent International Red Cross Commission of nine members
has been established to discuss every problem which arises
between the conferences and to decide when and where the next
conference shall meet. Five of the nine are elected by the
Conference from the national Red Cross organizations, two are
appointed by the Committee and two by the League.
The work of the International Committee has two branches, the
General Affairs Division and the Executive Division. The General
Affairs Division has worked to spread knowledge of the Geneva
Conventions and the principles of the Red Cross, a work which has
been of particular importance in all the new states; at the same
time the Committee has tried to make governments improve and
extend the Geneva Convention, which did not correspond to the
modern form of war, and four new conventions were adopted at a
conference in 1949, for the protection of the victims of sea
warfare, for the shipwrecked, for prisoners of war, and for the
protection of nonmilitary persons in time of war. But governments
proved most reluctant to accept any conventions that would forbid
atomic warfare and use of weapons whose destruction cannot be
controlled by those who make use of them.
The Red Cross Conference at New Delhi again adopted such
resolutions, and they were sent to the governments of all
countries, with the remarks of the International Committee. Most
governments have given no answer, and Mr. Boissier has commented
that it is not difficult to understand this silence. It will be
necessary to fight fear and hatred. And in this work is the
future of the Red Cross.
In many quarters there has been an idea that the Committee as a
Swiss body is more completely neutral and impartial than the
League. It was the Committee that was asked to take care of all
transportation and distribution of aid in Hungary after the
uprising of the people,6 but it
was the League that took care of the refugees, at a cost of more
than 100 million Swiss francs; and corresponding large sums of
money were given to the Algerian refugees7 and to the Congo8 - and it was a delegate of the
Committee who was killed at Katanga.
It was the Committee that was permitted by the government of
Nepal to give aid to the refugees from Tibet9 - for Switzerland, not being a member
of the United
Nations, had taken no part in any decision against Communist
China.
In the same way it was on the invitation of the Japanese Red
Cross, that the Committee repatriated North Korean prisoners of
war in Japan. Up to 1962 some 75,000 had been brought back to
their home country, and in Europe the Committee has been active
in repatriating refugees in even greater numbers and bringing
together families that had been dispersed. And the Committee
under the peace treaty with Japan has distributed the
compensation given to those who had been prisoners of war in
Japan, and in Europe to the victims of medical experiments in
Germany.
The work of the Committee is so closely coordinated with that of
the League that to all practical purposes they form a unity, and
in many fields they work hand in hand with the United Nations.
The great worldwide humanitarian work of the League falls outside
the sphere of the Peace Prize, but the cooperation between the
Red Cross Societies of ninety different countries of different
races, creeds, and color is of very real importance for
international understanding and peace.
In Mohammedan countries the Red Cross became the Red Half-Moon on
white, in Iran the Red Lion and Sun. But they all work loyally
together, and the successful efforts of the Red Cross Societies
in China and Japan which led to the repatriation of 30,000
Japanese prisoners in China in 1952 promoted peace in the Far
East, and corresponding efforts which led to an exchange of
prisoners between Poland and West Germany in 1955 had real
importance. Particular stress has been laid on the work of the
Junior Red Cross Societies. The Red Cross youth movement started
in the U.S. in 1923 and has been in constant evolution. Today
there are some sixty-two million members, and it cannot be
doubted that if millions of young women and men are taught in the
schools that we are all brothers-"Tutti fratelli" and that little
deeds of friendship and little words of love should bind the
world together, the ideas of Nobel will triumph.
* Mr. Hambro delivered
this speech on December 10, 1963, in the Auditorium of the
University of Oslo, following Mr. Jahn's presentation of the
prize for 1962 to Linus Pauling. At the
conclusion of Mr. Hambro's remarks, Mr. Jahn, chairman of the
Committee, presented the Nobel diplomas and medals to Leopold
Boissier as representative of the International Committee of the
Red Cross and to John A. MacAulay as representative of the League
of Red Cross Societies. Both men responded with brief speeches of
acceptance, which included tributes to some earlier prizewinners
and to the Norwegian Red Cross. The English text of Mr. Hambro's
speech, with some minor emendations, is that appearing in Les
Prix Nobel en 1963.
1. Louis Napoleon Bonaparte
(1808-1873), emperor of the French (1852-1870).
2. War between Sweden and Russia
(1808-1809) through which Russia acquired Finland from
Sweden.
3. Florence Nightingale
(1820-1910), English nurse and hospital reformer who organized
hospital units during the Crimean war (1853-1856).
4. By Julia A. Fletcher Carney
(1823-1908), American verse writer.
5. Harriet Beecher Stowe
(1811-1896), American author whose novel Uncle Tom's Cabin
(serial form, 1851; book form, 1852) did much to solid public
opinion in the North against slavery.
6. The Hungarian uprising of
October, 1956, against Soviet domination was put down by Russian
troops early in November.
7. The Algerian refugee problem
arose as a result of Algerian revolt against France, the ensuing
war between France and Algeria, and finally of civil strife, once
independence had been agreed upon in the early 1960s.
8. The new independent Republic of
the Congo, created in 1960, was immediately torn by regional and
tribal rivalries, with the province of Katanga seceding but
eventually being subdued by UN troops and reintegrated with the
Republic.
9. Many Tibetans became refugees
as a result of unrest after the Chinese Communists assumed
dominance over Tibet in the early 1950s and of the failure of a
full-scale Tibetan revolt in 1959.
From Nobel Lectures, Peace 1951-1970, Editor Frederick W. Haberman, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1972
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1963
MLA style: "The Nobel Peace Prize 1963 - Presentation Speech". Nobelprize.org. 25 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/laureates/1963/press.html
