Jerzy Einhorn
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Jerzy Einhorn (July 26, 1925 in Częstochowa, Poland – April 28, 2000 in Stockholm, Sweden) was a Polish-born Swedish medical doctor, researcher and politician.
Born into a Yiddish-speaking Jewish family, he became a victim of the Holocaust during World War II. Having survived Częstochowa ghetto, he was detained at the Hasag-Palcery concentration camp between June 1943 and January 1945. He later chronicled his experience there in a book entitled Chosen to live.
After the war, Einhorn graduated high school in Częstochowa in 1945 and began to study medicine at the Łódź university . A year later, he left Poland and travelled, via Denmark, to Sweden. For decades Einhorn worked in one Sweden's most prestigious oncological institutions, Radiumhemmet at the Karolinska Institute outside of Stockholm, where his son, Stefan Einhorn, is currently head doctor. He was also a member of the Nobel Prize Committee in Medicine as well as an honorary member and recipient of the gold medal of the Radiological Society of North America.
Throughout their lives, both Jerzy Einhorn and his wife were actively involved in Zionist fundraising. During 1991-94 Einhorn was a Swedish MP for the Christian Democrats.
His children Lena Einhorn and Stefan Einhorn are both famous authors in Sweden.
[edit] Books
- Utvald att leva (English: Chosen to live), Bonniers 1996
- Det är människor det handlar om, Bonniers 1998