Fred Cuny
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Frederick C. Cuny (born November 14, 1944 in New Haven, Connecticut) was an American disaster relief specialist who was active in many humanitarian projects around the world from 1969 until his forced disappearance in Chechnya in 1995.
Contents |
[edit] Life and career
In 1952 the teenage Cuny moved with his family to Texas. He had a passion for flying and hoped to become a fighter pilot. He studied engineering at Texas A&M University, specializing in problems in developing countries, and urban planning at the University of Houston. Unable to pass his language requirements, Cuny could not go on to Officers' Candidate School, thus ending his dream of life as an officer in the military. However, he became increasingly involved in causes such as the problems of local Mexican migrant workers.
Cuny became an accomplished civil engineer, working on large construction projects such as a radar installation at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport. At some point he became dissatisfied and decided to become a disaster relief specialist who used his training in engineering to do humanitarian work. Cuny was hired by organizations such as the United Nations and private foundations to design and carry out relief plans. Cuny was able to maintain the autonomy to devise solutions his way and became increasingly active as a policy adviser. Cuny's overriding goal was to institute a radical restructuring of the way the disaster relief system operated throughout the world.
In 1971 he founded the non-profit Intertect Relief and Reconstruction Corp. of Dallas, Texas, a relief mission technical assistance and training company. This company became the major disaster relief agency, Interworks. Cuny also founded the Center for the Study of Societies in Crisis which became known as the Cuny Center after his death. He worked in countries such as Biafra, Guatemala, Ethiopia, Iraq, Somalia, and Bosnia. At the end of his life he was working closely with George Soros' Open Society Institute, and was instrumental in the early stages of founding the International Crisis Group, which seeks to institutionalize the knowledge base of relief experts.
In April 1995, Cuny and his team of two Russian Red Cross doctors and an interpreter disappeared in Chechnya while seeking to negotiate a cease-fire. Their remains were never found. It is suspected that the Russians, antagonised by Cuny's published criticism of the war, disseminated propaganda that Cuny and his team were Russian spies. Cuny's family believes that although they were arrested by Chechen forces under Dzhokhar Dudayev who were meant to pass them on for safe keeping, they were instead executed under the orders of Rizvan Elbiev, a local Chechen commander.[1]
Cuny was named a MacArthur Fellow in 1995, but disappeared before he could officially received his award.
[edit] Books
- Famine, Conflict and Response: A Basic Guide Frederick C. Cuny, Richard B. Hill, ISBN 1-56549-090-8
[edit] Media depictions
- The Man Who Tried to Save the World: The Dangerous Life & Mysterious Disappearance of Fred Cuny, Scott Anderson, ISBN 0-385-48666-9
-
- In 2002 Harrison Ford was working on turning The Man Who Tried to Save the World into a movie.
- In 1997 the PBS program Frontline profiled Fred Cuny in a one hour show entitled “The Lost American”.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- The Cuny Center
- The International Crisis Group
- Fred Cuny profile - online ethics center
- The Master of Disaster - profile at Austin Chronicle
- Frederick Cuny, Reliever
- Garner's Missing Link - about Cuny's assistance to Jay Garner in northern Iraq after the first Gulf War
- The New York Review of Books 1995 biography of Cuny.