Hans G. Furth

British internment camp for Jewish refugees, Huyton

Hans G. Furth (December 2, 1920, Vienna – November 7, 1999, Takoma Park, Maryland), was a Professor emeritus in the Faculty of Psychology of the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., at the time of his death aged 78.

Early Life in Europe

Furth was born Hans G. Fürth to Jewish parents in Austria and baptized into the Catholic Church at the age of 16. As a child, he was trained in classical piano and active in Austrian Boy Scouts. Shortly after the Anschluss Furth fled the Nazis, first to Croatia as a dependent of his mother, who had married an elderly Croatian acquaintance to gain entry into that country. Upon achieving majority, Furth would have been evicted from Croatia, so he obtained a visa to travel to Belgium. En route, he jumped off his train in Switzerland, and lived illegally with a Swiss family. From Switzerland, he obtained a visa to travel to the United Kingdom by volunteering to work in the Australian outback. After arriving in England, he abandoned the Australian venture, and lived with a professor of music. He graduated from the Royal Academy of Music in London in 1940 hoping to become a concert pianist and, after being interned as an enemy alien, performed at internment camps for Jewish refugees in various locations throughout Britain (pictured), as well as Hutchinson Camp on the Isle of Man.[1] He spent the next decade as a monk in the Carthusian order and then emigrated to North America.[2]

Career in North America

Furth received a master's degree in clinical psychology from the University of Ottawa in 1954 and a doctorate degree in psychology from Portland State University in 1960. In the same year, he became a professor of psychology at Catholic University of America, in Washington, D.C.

Furth wrote ten published books on child development since 1966. One of them, Piaget and Knowledge: Theoretical Foundations (published by Prentice-Hall in 1969) became a bestseller. After retiring from full-time teaching in 1990, Furth focused on writing about his past and completed a manuscript entitled "Society Faces Extinction: The Psychology of Auschwitz and Hiroshima."[2] He wrote the essay "One million Polish rescuers of hunted Jews?" published in the Journal of Genocide Research.[3]

Hans G. Furth specialized in developmental psychology. His earliest book, Thinking Without Language: Psychological Implications of Deafness, was an examination of the silent language of the deaf and its teaching methods. Furth found that deaf children had cognitive skills comparable to hearing children, even when they had neither verbal nor sign language.[4] He argued in favor of educating deaf children in sign language rather than mainstreaming, which was the prevailing method at the time.[2]

Furth popularized the philosophy of Swiss child development psychologist Jean Piaget, with whom he worked at the University of Geneva in the mid-1960s. His books utilized Piaget's largely abstract concepts, including the notion that children left unattended continually rethink their understanding of the world and, as such, do not wait for educators to fill them with structured knowledge.[5] A longtime colleague of Dr. Furth's, professor James Youniss, said Dr. Furth's "intensity" inspired leading developmental psychologists to embark on similar careers.

Later interests

Furth and his wife, Madeleine Steen Furth, were active in the civil rights movement of the 1960s, offering their home in Washington, D.C., to protesters who marched with Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in August 1963.

Furth had seven children: Sonia, Peter, Julie, Daniel, David, Paul, and Cathy, and left a score of grandchildren.

In the last decade of his life, Hans G. Furth often performed at area nursing homes, playing works of Bach, Beethoven, and Mozart. He was an avid hiker and cyclist, a member of the Wanderbirds Hiking Club. He had the heart attack that killed him while hiking in Shenandoah National Park.

Selected works

References