窪蹋勛圖厙

 

Celebrating "the guest who stayed forever"

Elisabeth Mann Borgese and the Drama of the Oceans

- January 17, 2012

Elisabeth Mann Borgese (file photo)
Elisabeth Mann Borgese (file photo)

Elisabeth Mann Borgese once referred to herself as the guest who stayed forever.

After all, the German-born scholar and founder of the (IOI) had only planned to come to Halifax in 1979 for one year. She quite reasonably expected that her groundbreaking work in maritime law and policy would take her elsewhere when her Killam Fellowship at 窪蹋勛圖厙was up.

Maybe it was the people here, or perhaps it was being able to live every day next to the ocean. Whatever the reason, Ms. Borgese called Nova Scotia and Canada her home for the rest of her life. Over the next 25 years, she became a citizen, worked as a professor in the Department of Political Science at Dal, travelled the world to continue her work, and was awarded the Order of Canada.

This is how Ms. Borgese is known in Halifax, but in her homeland of Germanyfrom which she was exiled as a teenager when Hitler came to power in 1933her name is more often associated with that of her father, Nobel Prize-winning author Thomas Mann. In fact, her family is a point of national interest.

Some say, since we dont have any royalty anymore, we have the Mann family, who are like the Windsors of the Germans, explains Holger Pils, director of in L羹beck, Germany. About every month, there is a book appearing on the Mann family.

Buddenbrookhaus attracts 60,000 visitors each year to the Mann estate, and is both a permanent exhibit and memorial to the family. Three of Thomas Manns childrenErika, Klaus and Golowere also famous authors, as was his older brother Heinrich.

The Drama of the Oceans


But it was Elisabeth that brought Mr. Pils and research staff member Karolina K羹hn to 窪蹋勛圖厙last week. The museum is preparing a feature exhibit titled Elisabeth Mann Borgese and the Drama of the Oceans, set to open this June, and the largest collection of her papers and letters is located here in the . Ms. K羹hn will be in the archives for the next couple of weeks, sorting through Ms. Borgeses files.

You find a lot of papers on her professional life, about the International Ocean Institute, about her work at 窪蹋勛圖厙, explains Ms. K羹hn. "But there are also family letters, a lot of photos, and more. Were really working to link her professional life and the themes she approached, on the one hand, with her life here in Halifax.

Were trying to explain the link between her biography and her professional work what happened in the course of her life and career that led her to dedicate her life to this cause, adds Mr. Pils.

"A remarkable life"


Believing that the oceans were the common heritage of mankind, Ms. Borgese established the International Ocean Institute in the 1970s, which has grown today to include 25 centres around the world. Her work was critical in the United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea, and she remained a passionate advocate for the oceans until her death ten years ago.

After it opens in L羹beck, the exhibit will move to Kiel, and Mr. Pils says that theyre also looking at possibly bringing it to Halifax sometime in 2013, sharing Ms. Borgeses story with the people who knew her here in Canada.

She really was a pioneer, a utopian in some ways, but she linked these aims with real politics, to policy and hard work. And she pushed that process ahead for 30 years. She lived a remarkable life.

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