An ardent patriot. Paul-Émile Dentan may not be known to the younger generations working today in the spirit of Initiatives of Change. But the achievements of this Genevan who has just left us at the age of 89 are not necessarily known even to those who were among his closest friends, as is my case. For alongside his deep faith and his tenacity in action, modesty was what characterized him.
He had, for example, ardently supported a Prime Minister of Sri Lanka who hoped to introduce democracy in his country. Unfortunately the assassination of this leader very soon afterwards destroyed this effort. Dentan was also very close to several African leaders to support them as their countries gained independence.
His father, a pastor from Lutry, and his Alsatian mother moved to Geneva in 1927, and it was there that their only son grew up. As a child, Paul-Émile was captivated by the construction of the Palais des Nations, without suspecting the role that this institution would play in his life.
During his recruit school, Dentan was marked by a dramatic experience: his school had to spend the night in a fort for an early morning shooting exercise. His colonel finally decides to postpone the project. During the night, the fort's ammunition depot was blown up, killing all the Italian workers who were working on a new tunnel. Of this experience, Paul-Émile wrote: 'This catastrophe had an unexpected effect on him'.
In 1946,he participated in the meeting in Interlaken where it was decided to buy the Caux-Palace to make it the international center of Moral Rearmament. After completing his studies in political science, he became involved with the movement full-time in the United States, Asia and Africa, where he spent ten years. In Paris, he orchestrated the dubbing of the film 'Liberté' and promoted it in four African countries in the service of dialogue and peace. Later, the passion we both had for writing led us to create the magazine 'Changer' which helped strengthen the expression of Moral Re-Armament ideas in the French-speaking world.
He then embarked on professional journalism as a columnist for the United Nations for the 'Journal de Genève' and the 'Nouvelliste du Valais'. An ardent patriot, Paul-Émile Dentan paid a vibrant tribute to the Swiss Protestants who, in 1942, took all kinds of steps to oppose the closing of the borders ordered by Federal Councillor von Steiger, an order that was to lead to the refoulement and death of many refugees, in a book entitled 'Impossible de se taire'. These brave Swiss were inspired by the conviction that Switzerland's existence was based more on a spiritual pact than on a principle of neutrality. This conviction is still valid today. Afterwards, politics caught up with him and Paul-Émile was called upon to become secretary general of the Geneva liberal party and a municipal councilor.
At the same time, he was active in the social field and assumed the presidency of the Petit-Saconnex parish council and the retirement home in the same place. In recent years, he was forced to move into this institution where his wife still resides, unfortunately in a state of health that is a severe ordeal for his family and those close to this close-knit couple.
Paul-Émile Dentan who was born on August 17, 1926, passed away on October 3, 2015