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About DNKL |
Maurice Pate
Maurice Pate (1894-1965) was UNICEF's first executive director from January 1947 until his death in January 1965, a few months before he was to retire.
He was decorated by Belgium, Ecuador, France, The Netherlands, and Poland, and was honored - closer to home - by the award of the Class of 1915's Merit Cup in 1950 and Princeton's honorary degree of Doctor of Philanthropy in 1958. In 1960 the Norwegian Committee for UNICEF proposed his nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize. Declining this honor for himself, Pate suggested that UNICEF be nominated instead. This was done, and UNICEF received the prize in 1965, the year that Pate died. At his funeral, the organist played "He Shall Feed His Flock," from Handel's Messiah; U Thant said that "the United Nations and the world's children" were "infinitely the richer for his long and devoted service"; the minister read the Parable of the Loaves and Fishes; and a children's choir sang the anthem "Let All Things Now Living," to a traditional Welsh melody. The service closed with these words from the Bhagavad Gita, chosen by Mrs. Pate: "One who does one's duties for the love of God, who considers God to be the Supreme Goal of life, who has no attachment, no personal ambition or self-interest, who has no inimical or bitter feelings against anyone in the whole world, will surely reach God." Pate was characterized by his successor as UNICEF's architect and builder and as a great practical idealist. |
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