http://www.vtnews.vt.edu/story.php?relyear=2010
<http://www.vtnews.vt.edu/story.php?relyear=2010&itemno=322> &itemno=322

Bucharest street to be named in honor of Romanian-American Virginia Tech
Professor Liviu Librescu


By Mark Owczarski
(540) 231-5223, [email protected] 

 Liviu Librescu <http://www.vtnews.vt.edu/images/09850librescu.jpg>  
Liviu Librescu

BLACKSBURG, VA., April 19, 2010 -- The street in front of the new U.S.
Embassy compound in Bucharest, Romania, will be named after Virginia Tech
Professor Liviu Librescu, who sacrificed his own life to save his students
on April 16, 2007.

U.S. Ambassador to Romania Mark Gitenstein said, "Professor Librescu will
live on in our memory every day as we pass by this street named in his
honor." 

Naming the street after
<http://www.weremember.vt.edu/biographies/librescu.html> Librescu was the
initiative of  <http://www.vtnews.vt.edu/story.php?relyear=2009&itemno=243>
former U.S. Ambassador Nicholas Taubman who says he was profoundly moved by
the professor's courage. Taubman stated: "While he was a leader in the
school of engineering at Virginia Tech, Professor Liviu Librescu was first
and foremost a humanitarian who put the lives of his students above his own.
His name will always be a blessing and a tribute to those who perished on
April 16th, 2007." 

On April 18, 2007, then-President George W. Bush honored Librescu at a
memorial service held at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. "That
day we saw horror, but we also saw quiet acts of courage. We saw this
courage in a teacher named Liviu Librescu. With the gunman set to enter his
class, this brave professor blocked the door with his body while his
students fled to safety. This Holocaust survivor gave his own life so that
others may live." 

Romanian President Traian Basescu awarded Librescu posthumously, on April
18, 2007, the National Order Star of Romania in rank of Grand Cross, the
highest Romanian honor, in recognition of the heroic sacrifice of his life
to save his students at the Virginia Tech campus. In a message of
condolences to the President of the United States, on April 17, 2007, the
Romanian President expressed, on behalf of the people of Romania, solidarity
with the grieving families of those who perished in the Virginia Tech
tragedy, and with the American people. 

Librescu was born in Ploiesti, Romania. After Romania allied with Nazi
Germany in World War II, his father, Isidore Librescu, was deported to a
labor camp in Transnistria, now in the Republic of Moldova, and later his
family was deported to a ghetto in the Romanian city of Focsani. As a boy,
he was interned in a labor camp in Transnistria, but he refused to speak
about that and those who knew him said that he was extraordinarily modest. 

After surviving the Holocaust, Librescu was repatriated to communist Romania
where he studied aerospace engineering at Bucharest Polytechnic University,
graduating in 1952 and then studying for a master's degree at the same
university. He received a Ph.D. in fluid mechanics in 1969 at the Academy of
Science of Romania. 

>From 1953 to 1975 he worked as a researcher at the Bucharest Institute of
Applied Mechanics, and later at the Institute of Fluid Mechanics and the
Institute of Fluid Mechanics and Aerospace Constructions of the Academy of
Science of Romania. His career stalled in the 1970s because he refused to
swear allegiance to the Romanian Communist Party. When Librescu requested
permission to emigrate to Israel, the Academy of Science of Romania fired
him. 

After years of government refusal, Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin
personally intervened to get the Librescu family an emigration permit by
directly asking Romanian President Nicolae Ceausescu to let them go. They
moved to Israel in 1978. 

>From 1979 to 1986, Librescu was professor of aeronautical and mechanical
engineering at Tel Aviv University and taught at the Technion in Haifa. In
1985, he left for the United States where he served as professor at Virginia
Tech's  <http://www.eng.vt.edu/> College of Engineering in its Department of
Engineering Science and Mechanics from Sept. 1, 1985, until his death. 

Librescu wrote several scientific books and numerous articles and received
many honors and awards. 

See related Virginia Tech News stories: 

*        <http://www.vtnews.vt.edu/story.php?relyear=2009&itemno=850>
"Student engagement center named in memory of Liviu Librescu" 

*        <http://www.vtnews.vt.edu/story.php?relyear=2007&itemno=268> "New
Jersey college to name Holocaust Resource Center room in honor of Virginia
Tech Professor Liviu Librescu" 

*        <http://www.vtnews.vt.edu/story.php?relyear=2007&itemno=565>
"General Electric presents $325,000 to College of Engineering"

This story was provided by Jeri Guthrie-Corn
(mailto:[email protected]), Deputy Chief of Mission , U.S. Embassy
Bucharest.

C 2010  <http://www.vt.edu/> Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
University
 
----------------------------
 
Vali
"Noble blood is an accident of fortune; noble actions are the chief mark of
greatness."
"When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know
peace."
Aboneaza-te la  <mailto:[email protected]> ngo_list: o
alternativa moderata (un pic) la [ngolist]
Please consider the environment - do you really need to print this email?

<<09850librescu.jpg>>

Raspunde prin e-mail lui