[2][3] He spent 12 years on the writing, the 2,700-page two-volume work, an "encyclopedia of peace" and history, in favor of international reforms to overcome the appeals of Communism and to join in a United Nations "economic parliament of humanity" to build up underdeveloped countries.
[12][13] In 1955, the three signed a letter addressed to South Africa:[14]The Union for the Protection of the Human Person by International Social and Economic Cooperation sends its greetings and cordial wishes to the Congress of the People.
Only by insuring the equality of opportunity in education, work, and social life for all citizens can a nation develop its spiritual resources and rise to the summit of human culture.
[15][2][3] His father was Dr. Abraham Gourevitch, a liberal physician who spent many years of his youth in exile in Switzerland, where he obtained his medical degree from Bern University.
A writer and poet, Dr. Abraham Gourevitch was a man of strong Populist convictions, and he fought during his whole life for the principles of liberty and for the human rights of peasants and Jews.