And Yet There Are Heroes


http://www.claremont.org/blogs/blogid.5193/blog_detail.asp

It's important to see heroism in tragedy, too.  A 77-year old Aeronautical
Engineering professor who survived the Holocaust in Romania moves to Israel
and comes to America on sabbatical.  He decides to stay here.  He adopts
this country as his own, and helps save America by saving Americans--by
putting himself between the gunman and his students.  He survived Hitler and
died in Blacksburg, but he died a hero.

 
<http://english.hotnews.ro/International-media-honors-Romanian-born-professo
r-killed-in-Virginia-massacre-articol_44738.htm> Israeli professor of
Romanian origin Liviu Librescu numbers among those killed in the Virginia
Tech University massacre on Monday. According to the International Herald
Tribune, Librescu sacrificed his life to save his students. He had blocked
the access to the his class so that students can run from the attacker.

Librescu, 77, was teaching at the Virginia Tech University for 20 years.

Israeli media also announce the death of Liviu Librescu. The online edition
of the Jerusalem Post reports that he was shot to death, while ynetnews.com
writes that he was killed during his attempt to block the access to the
class.

Alec Calhoun, a student who witnessed his death, told the Associated Press
that he saw his teacher blocking the door to the class while some of her
colleagues were hiding, while others were jumping out of the window. 

The professor had been driven to school by his wife less than an hour before
he was shot. 

AP writes that his wife Marlina and sons Arieh and Joe have already started
to prepare for his burial in Israel. His daughter-in-law Ayala has said the
professor was very passionate of his work and a dedicated family man, while
University colleagues described him as a "real gentleman".

Liviu Librescu graduated the Politechnical University in Bucharest in 1952
with a specialization in aeronautical engineering. In 1972, he received the
Traian Vuia Award of the Romanian Academy of Sciences.

In 1979-1886 he served as mechanical engineering professor at the Tel Aviv
University.

According to ynetnews.com, he and his wife were survivors of the Holocaust
who immigrated to Israel from Romania in 1978.

The-then communist regime in Bucharest did not allow him to leave the
country, but that became possible after Israeli PM of the time, Menachem
Begin, pressed Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceausescu to let him go.

Several years later he left for the US. He has teached mechanical
engineering at the Virginia university since 1986.

He was awarded Doctor Honoris Causa of the Politechnical University in
Bucharest In 2000. 

 <http://www.claremont.org/blogs/byauthor.asp#39> Seth Leibsohn | April 17,
2007 | 07:13 AM
 
Copyright C 2002-2006 The Claremont Institute
 
----------------------------
 
Vali
"Noble blood is an accident of fortune; noble actions are the chief mark of
greatness." (Carlo Goldoni)

"When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know
peace." (Jimi Hendrix)

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