Legends stories
The Nobel Peace Prize 1901
Born: 20 May 1822, Paris, France
Died: 12 June 1912, Paris, France
Scientist, Politician and Peace
Activist
At the turn of the century, everyone agreed that Frederic Passy was a
worthy Laureate. In both age and prominence, he was the "dean" of the
international peace movement. Both as an economist and as a politician, he
maintained that free trade between independent nations promoted peace. Passy founded
the first French Peace Society, which held a congress in Paris during the 1878
World Exhibition. As an independent leftist republican in the French Chamber of
Deputies, he opposed France's colonial policy because it did not accord with
the ideals of free trade.
Passy was also one of the founders of the Inter-Parliamentary Union, an
organization for cooperation between the elected representatives of different
countries. Despite his age, Passy kept up his work for peace after 1901. In
1905, when the conflict over the union between Sweden and Norway peaked, Passy
declared that a peaceful solution would make him a hundred times happier than
when he received the Nobel Prize. And Passy saw his wish fulfilled.
Frederic
Passy (May 20, 1822-June 12, 1912) was born in Paris and lived
there his entire life of ninety years. The tradition of the French civil
service was strong in Passy’s family, his uncle, Hippolyte Passy (1793-1880),
rising to become a cabinet minister under both Louis Philippe and Louis Napoleon.
Educated as a lawyer, Frédéric Passy entered the civil service at the age of
twenty-two as an accountant in the State Council, but left after three years to
devote himself to systematic study of economics. He emerged as a theoretical
economist in 1857 with his Mélanges économiques,
a collection of essays he had published in the course of his research, and he
secured his scholarly reputation with a series of lectures delivered in
1860-1861 at the University of Montpellier and later published in two volumes under
the title Leçons d’économie politique. An
admirer of Richard Cobden, he became an ardent free trader, believing that free
trade would draw nations together as partners in a common enterprise, result in
disarmament, and lead to the abandonment of war. Passy lectured on economic
subjects in virtually every city and university of any consequence in France
and continued a stream of publications on economic subjects, some of the more
important being Les Machines et leur influence sur le
développement de l’humanité (1866), Malthus et sa doctrine (1868), L’Histoire du travail (1873). Passy’s passionate
belief in education found expression in De la propriété intellectuelle (1859)
end La Démocratie et l’instruction (1864). For these
contributions, among others, he was elected in 1877 to membership in the
Académie de sciences morales et politiques, a unit of the Institut de France.
Passy was not, however, a
cloistered scholar; he was a man of action. In 1867, encouraged by his
leadership of public opinion in trying to avert possible war between France and
Prussia over the Luxembourg question, he founded the «Ligue internationale et
permanente de la paix». When the Ligue became a casualty of the Franco-Prussian
War of 1870-1871, he reorganized it under the title «Société française des amis
de la paix» which in turn gave way to the more specifically oriented «Société
française pour l’arbitrage entre nations», established in 1889.
Passy carried on his efforts
within the government as well. He was elected to the Chamber of Deputies in
1881, again in 1885, and defeated in 1889. In the Chamber he supported
legislation favorable to labor, especially an act relating to industrial
accidents, opposed the colonial policy of the government, drafted a proposal
for disarmament, and presented a resolution calling for arbitration of
international disputes.
His parliamentary interest in
arbitration was whetted by Randal cremer
‘s success in guiding through the British Parliament a resolution
stipulating that England and the United States should refer to arbitration any
disputes between them not settled by the normal methods of diplomacy. In 1888
Cremer headed a delegation of nine British members of Parliament who met in
Paris with a delegation of twenty-four French deputies, headed by Passy, to
discuss arbitration and to lay the groundwork for an organization to advance
its acceptance. The next year, fifty-six French parliamentarians, twenty-eight
British, and scattered representatives from the parliaments of Italy, Spain,
Denmark, Hungary, Belgium, and the United States formed the Interparliamentary
Union, with Passy as one of its three presidents. The Union, still in
existence, established a headquarters to serve as a clearinghouse of ideas, and
encouraged the formation of informal individual national parliamentary groups
willing to support legislation leading to peace, especially through
arbitration.
Passy’s thought and action had
unity. International peace was the goal, arbitration of disputes in
international politics and free trade in goods the means, the national units
making up the Interparliamentary Union the initiating agents, the people the
sovereign constituency.
Through his prodigious labors
over a period of half a century in the peace movement, Passy became known as
the «apostle of peace». He wrote unceasingly and vividly. His Pour la paix (1909), which came out when he was
eighty-seven years old, is a personalized account – in lieu of an autobiography
which he deplored – of his work for international peace, noting especially the
founding of the Ligue, the «période décisive» when the Interparliamentary Union
was established, the development of peace congresses, and the value of the
Hague Conferences.
Passy was a renowned speaker,
noted for the intellectual demands he made on his audiences, as well as for his
powerful voice, his ample gestures, and his majestic and dignified manner.
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