
George Ignatieff
'George Ignatieff',
CC,
MA,
DCL (
December 16 1913 -
August 10 1989) was a
Canadian diplomat and was the recipient of the 1984
Pearson Medal of Peace for his work in
international service.
He was born in
St. Petersburg, Russia, the youngest of five sons, to a distinguished Russian family. His mother was
Princess Natasha Mestchersky and his father was
Count Paul Ignatieff, a close advisor to
Tsar Nicholas II serving as his last Minister of Education. In 1918, the year after the
Russian Revolution, Ignatieff was arrested and slated for execution but fled to
Canada with his family after he was released by sympathetic guards.
George Ignatieff was educated at Canadian universities before obtaining a
Rhodes Scholarship to study at
Oxford. In 1940 he joined the
Department of External Affairs and served at various posts including as Ambassador to
Yugoslavia from 1956 to 1958, permanent representative to
NATO (1963-1966), Canadian Ambassador to the
United Nations (1966-1969) and president of the
United Nations Security Council (1968-1969). In 1984 he was appointed disarmament ambassador by
Prime Minister John Turner. He also served as Provost of
University of Trinity College from 1972 to 1979 and later as chancellor of the
University of Toronto from 1980 to 1986. The
University of Trinity College's theatre is named after Ignatieff, and is fondly known as the GIT (pronounced 'jit').
He was made a Companion of the
Order of Canada in 1973.
Ignatieff's autobiography, ''The Making of a Peacemonger'', was published in 1985 by the
University of Toronto Press.
His son,
Michael Ignatieff, is a well known author, broadcaster and scholar who was elected to the Canadian parliament in 2006. He was a
Liberal leadership candidate in 2006.
External links
★
Pearson Medal of Peace - George Ignatieff
★
Order of Canada Citation