Johan Bernhard Hjort
From Free net encyclopedia
Johan Bernhard Hjort (1895 - 1969) founded the Norwegian "Nasjonal Samling" party together with Vidkun Quisling on May 17 1933. He left the party in 1937, when he broke with Quisling. He was arrested by Gestapo in 1941 by the direct intervention of Josef Terboven, after Hjort published a scholarly article in a journal of Norwegian law that openly criticised the German occupation. He spent prison time in Oslo and then Berlin. After being released from prison, Hjort carried out important resistance work in Germany, associated with the White Buses operation that saved thousands of Scandinavians from concentration camps. After the war he fought as a Supreme Court lawyer for the artistic freedom of controversial artists and for the natural legal rights of homosexuals. He was a long-term leader of "Riksmålsforbundet", an association that fought for the free evolution of the Norwegian language, in the direction of Riksmål. He was a prolific writer and lecturer and a frequent contributor to public debate. Among his books are Justismord (1952), Dømt med rette? (1958), and Demokrati og statsmakt (1963). He also translated Kipling's Just So Stories into Norwegian.
References
- Ivo de Figueiredo (2002): "Fri mann", Aschehoug ISBN 82-03-22973-5 ("Free man", in Norwegian); a biography of Hjort that won the Brage Prize (comparable in Norway to a Pulitzer Prize)
- Wanda Hjort Heger (1984): "Hver fredag foran porten", Gyldendal ISBN 82-05-14937-2 ("Every Friday at the gate", in Norwegian), German edition (1989) "Jeden Freitag vor dem Tor" Schneekluth ISBN 3-7951-1132-3; Hjort's daughter's story about the war years, the tracking down of concentration camps, and the planning and execution of the White Buses operation that successfully saved thousands of prisoners from the campsnn:Johan Bernhard Hjort