Cite as "AILA InfoNet Doc. No. 03082140 (posted Aug. 21, 2003)"
Our friend and role model, Arthur Helton, died tragically and prematurely on
Tuesday, August 19, in the bombing of the United Nations Headquarters in
Baghdad. Arthur was 54. He was in Baghdad to assess humanitarian
conditions, consistent with his life-long commitment to assuring human
rights.
Arthur was accomplished at many levels. He directed the Refugee Project at
the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights. He founded and directed the Forced
Migration Project at the Open Society Institute. When he died, he was the
director of peace and conflict studies and senior fellow at the Council on
Foreign Relations. He taught immigration and refugee law classes at New
York University School of Law and at Central European University in
Budapest. His 2002 book, The Price of Indifference: Refugees and
Humanitarian Action in the New Century, synthesized decades of his
accumulated wisdom. He also wrote more than 80 scholarly articles.
Arthur was an unusual combination of macro and micro-focus. He was a
leader in international migration circles, but at precisely the same time would
send a colleague a draft of an article to review, ever careful about every
detail.
But perhaps the most compelling thing about Arthur Helton was his
humility. He was a gentle and generous soul, the rare person who is
renowned but who makes others around him feel important. He touched the
lives of scores of young lawyers, inspiring them to take up the cause of
refugees and immigrants.
We draw comfort in the knowledge that Arthur died furthering his life’s
work. His death saddens us but, just as Arthur would have wanted, impels
us to honor his legacy with our own unflagging efforts on behalf of human rights
and justice.
AILA will post information about a memorial service as soon as it becomes
available.
Nadine Wettstein