Richard P. Unsworth is a senior fellow at the Kahn Liberal Arts Institute at Smith College. He has taught religion at Smith College and Dartmouth College, and served as headmaster and president of Northfield Mount Hermon School. His years of involvement with the College Cevenol in France led to a friendship with Andre and Magda Trocme.
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Description
A beautifully written and long overdue biography of Magda and Andre Trocme, two of the prime movers in a World War II rescue mission in south-central France that saved the lives of an estimated 3,500 refugees. Working with thousands of unpublished pages, Unsworth probes deeply into the psyche of these two very different internationalists from whose biographies emerge a history of nonviolence, conscientious objection and pacifism in the twentieth century.-- "Patrick G. Henry, Whitman College" A compelling and engaging narrative that tasks any reader to think about the role and reality of violence within their world. More to the point, it tasks anyone interested in nonviolence to think about the Christian call to become peacemakers in the world as an uncompromising demand.-- "Peace and Justice Studies Journal" A courageous and inspirational story of Andre and Magda Trocme who chose non-violent resistance and, together with the parishioners of Le Chambon-sur-Lignon, saved the lives of many Jewish children in World War II France. An unforgettable read.-- "Francois Bovon, Harvard Divinity School and the University of Geneva" An absolutely wonderful new biography of two seminal figures in the international history of nonviolence. Unsworth draws on rich archival research and personal interviews, skillfully weaving a narrative of these two exceptionally courageous and inspiring individuals. A comprehensive and engagingly written account, and a 'must-read' for anyone interested in nonviolence, the resistance to Nazism, and more broadly the meaning of a life uncompromisingly lived according to the highest ethical ideals.-- "Micheal D. Bess, Vanderbilt University Religion, Theology, and the Holocaust"