Inspirational Quotations

Inspirational Quotes by Stephane Hessel (French Diplomat, Writer, Concentration Camp Surviv)

Stéphane Frédéric Hessel (1917–2013) was a diplomat, ambassador, writer, concentration camp survivor. He was also a French Resistance member and an agent of Bureau Central de Renseignements et d’Action, the World War II-era forerunner of the French intelligence service.

Born of Jewish origin in Berlin, Hessel arrived in France at the age of eight and gained French citizenship in 1939. He became a prominent member of the French Resistance and was imprisoned in the Buchenwald and Dora concentration camps.

After surviving the war, Hessel worked as a French diplomat at the United Nations, where he helped draft the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Hessel held diplomatic postings around the world, including Vietnam in the 1950s and Algeria in the 1960s. He continued to champion various human rights causes throughout his life, including the cause of illegal immigrants in France.

Hessel spent the last years of his life calling for people to resist the tyranny of the global capitalist system and protest against massive wealth inequality. His 32-page essay Indignez-vous! (Time for Outrage!; 2010) sold 4.5 million copies worldwide and inspired the Spanish Indignados, the Arab Spring, the Occupy Wall Street, and other political movements.

More: Wikipedia READ: Works by Stephane Hessel

I had a brush with death on several occasions, just like, and I insist on this, almost everyone of my generation.
Stephane Hessel

In the immediate post-War years we lived with the almost obsessive idea that a new atomic bomb was going to fall.
Stephane Hessel

Of course, the strongest moment was when my life was saved rather miraculously in Buchenwald. When I arrived I didn’t know I was condemned to death, I thought on the contrary that the war was as good as finished. And then suddenly we realised that we were condemned men awaiting the execution order from Berlin.
Stephane Hessel

Because even in the moments where the history of the world, of France or of Europe, appears the most perilous or the most depressing, like with the Serbs in Yugoslavia, between the lines there is always the unifying thread of a history that has meaning and that gives more and more responsibility and liberty to individuals.
Stephane Hessel

To create is to resist, to resist is to create.
Stephane Hessel

The Second World War gave birth to two monsters, let’s call them Auschwitz and Hiroshima.
Stephane Hessel

I abandoned philosophy and more general ideas for diplomacy.
Stephane Hessel

The worst possible outlook is indifference that says, ‘I can’t do anything about it; I’ll just get by.’ Behaving like that deprives you of one of the essentials of being human: the capacity and the freedom to feel outraged. That freedom is indispensable, as is the political involvement that goes with it.
Stephane Hessel

You say to yourself, I am the survivor, so my life must have some purpose. It’s a bit moralistic, but when you’re young, and I was barely 27, you feel as if you are carrying something. Afterwards, I always had the impression that my life was something that had been saved, therefore it had to be invested in something.
Stephane Hessel

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