Dag Hammarskjöld (1905-61) was born in the city of Jönköping,
Sweden, but grew up and spent his early years in Uppsala, where his father
was the County Govenor. He became a Senior Lecturer in Economics in 1933,
was Under-Secretary in the Ministry of Finance for ten years, he served
as Sweden's Chief Delegate to the OECC negotiations 1947-48, Permanent
Under-Secretary at the Ministry for Foreign Affairs 1949-51 and then joined
the government as a non-political minister without portfolio and delat
with a broad range of international issues. In April 1953, Dag Hammarskjöld
was elected Secretary-General of the United Nations.
"You are about to enter the most impossible job on this earth". With
these words Tryggve Lie passed on his mandate of Secretary-General of
the United Nations to Dag Hammarskjöld. The world organization
was, at the time, facing most serious crises, and Lie had decided to
leave his mandate.
Hammarskjöld was an unknown quantity when he entered his mandate;
but he soon showed that he had the capacity to make the sluggish United
Nations organization effective. He became known as a dedicated leader
with far-sighted vision for his office. Driven by his personal determination
to be effective by reacting quickly to crises, he tried to solve problems
at an early stage, problems he was convinced would only become more
complicated by delays. During his term of office, he also introduced
quiet diplomacy in preference to open debates that could often lead
to deeper conflicts.
Dag Hammarskjöld brought new authority to his mandate as Secretary-General
of the United Nations. He maintained a disinterested and neutral stance
in his proceedings and emphasized the responsibility of the United Nations
to assure the interests and rights of smallers states in relation to
superpowers. Hammarskjöld also initiated the use of United Nations
peacekeeping forces and this policy became a permanent feature of United
Nations peacekeeping efforts.
During his mandate, Hammarskjöld successfully ameliorated the
consequences of three world crises: in the Suez war, 1956, and in the
conflicts in Lebanon and in Laos. When civil war broke out in the Congo,
Hammarskjöld was instrumental in having United Nations forces sent
to the area and he personally tried to mediate between the fighting
forces. During one of these missions, on September 17, 1961, Hammarskjöld
was killed in a plane crash in what is now Zambia.
Dag Hammarskjöld was posthumously awarded the Nobel Peace Prize
in 1961. Hammarskjöld was also a great cultural personality. He
was a much admired writer, translator, and one of the 18 members of
the Swedish Academy.