Crime and Courts

‘A Treasure of Humanity': 102-Year-Old Nazi Prosecutor Is Still Pushing for Peace

The trials marked the first time in history that mass murderers were prosecuted for war crimes

File - Ben Ferencz takes part in the Andre Singer documentary "Night Will Fall" in 2014.
Richard Blanshard/Getty Images

Ben Ferencz, the last surviving prosecutor from the Nuremberg trials, answered the phone in bright spirits. “Good morning,” he hollered. “Ask your questions.”

Nearly 75 years had passed since Ferencz secured convictions against 22 Nazi death squad commanders responsible for the murder of more than 1 million Jews and others. The trials marked the first time in history that mass murderers were prosecuted for war crimes, and Ferencz was only 27 at the time. He went on to play a crucial role in securing compensation for Holocaust survivors and in the creation of the International Criminal Court at The Hague.

Now he was sitting at his desk in Delray Beach, Florida, a 102-year-old man answering a reporter’s questions with wit and remarkable recall.

What were his final words to the lead defendant after a judge sentenced the man to death in 1948? “Goodbye, Mr. Ohlendorf.”

Dr. Edith Eger speaks about "The Gift," her book that mentions grief as a force for positive change, inspired by her story surviving the Auschwitz concentration camp, and her healing process from the trauma.

For more on this story, go to NBC News.

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