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* In [[Valencia, Spain]], there is a square named ''Olof Palme''.
* In [[Valencia, Spain]], there is a square named ''Olof Palme''.
* In [[Madrid, Spain]], there is a park named ''Olof Palme''.
* In [[Madrid, Spain]], there is a park named ''Olof Palme''.
* In [[Wiener Neustadt]], [[Austria]] there is a square called "Olof-Palme-Platz" in memory of Palme.
* In [[Sulaymaniyah|Silémaní]], [[Kurdistan (Iraq)|Iraqi Kurdistan]], there is a garden named after Olof Palme.
* In [[Sulaymaniyah|Silémaní]], [[Kurdistan (Iraq)|Iraqi Kurdistan]], there is a garden named after Olof Palme.
* In [[Windhoek]], [[Namibia]], there is a street named ''Olof Palme''.
* In [[Windhoek]], [[Namibia]], there is a street named ''Olof Palme''.

Revision as of 15:00, 24 April 2008

Olof Palme
26th Prime Minister of Sweden
In office
14 October 1969 – 8 October 1976
MonarchsGustav VI Adolf,
Carl XVI Gustaf
Preceded byTage Erlander
Succeeded byThorbjörn Fälldin
In office
8 October 1982 – 28 February 1986
MonarchCarl XVI Gustaf
DeputyIngvar Carlsson
Preceded byThorbjörn Fälldin
Succeeded byIngvar Carlsson
Personal details
Born(1927-01-30)30 January 1927
Stockholm, Sweden
Died28 February 1986(1986-02-28) (aged 59)
Stockholm, Sweden
Political partySocial Democratic
SpouseLisbet Palme (née Beck-Friis)

Sven Olof Joachim Palme (Olof Palme) (30 January 192728 February 1986) was a Swedish politician.

Palme was the leader of the Social Democratic Party from 1969 until his assassination in 1986. He was also the Prime Minister of Sweden twice during this period, heading a Privy Council Government from 1969 to 1976 and a cabinet government from 1982 until his death. Palme's murder was the first of its kind in modern Swedish history and had an impact across Scandinavia.[1]

Early life and education

Olof Palme (who played himself in an uncredited role in the movie "I Am Curious (Yellow)") and Lena Nyman, taken at the Guldbagge Award ceremony. Ms. Nyman won the 1967 award for Best Actress in a leading role.

Palme was born in Östermalm, Stockholm, Sweden. Although he came from an upper-class background, his political orientation came to be influenced by Social Democratic ideas and ideals. His travels in the Third World, as well as the United States – where he saw deep economic inequality and racial segregation – helped to define those views.

On a scholarship, he studied at Kenyon College, Ohio 19471948, graduating with a B.A. in less than a year.[2] Inspired by radical debate in the student community, he wrote a critical essay on Friedrich Hayek's The Road to Serfdom. Palme wrote his senior honor thesis on United Automobile Union, which was led at the time by Walter Reuther. After graduation he traveled throughout the country and eventually ended up in Detroit, where his hero Reuther agreed to an interview which lasted several hours. In later years, Palme regularly remarked during his many subsequent American visits, that the United States had made him a socialist, a remark that oftentimes has caused confusion. Within the context of his American experience, it was not that Palme was repelled by what he found in America, but rather that he was inspired by it.[3]

After hitchhiking through the U.S.A., he returned to Sweden to study law at Stockholm University. During his time at university, Palme became involved in student politics, working with the Swedish National Union of Students. In 1951, he became a member of the social democratic student association in Stockholm, although it is asserted he did not attend their political meetings at the time. The following year he was elected President of the Swedish National Union of Students.

Palme attributed his becoming a socialist to three major influences:

  • In 1947, he attended a debate on taxes between the Social Democrat Ernst Wigforss, the conservative Jarl Hjalmarsson and the liberal Elon Andersson;
  • The time he spent in the United States in the 1940s made him realise how wide the class divide was in America, and the extent of racism against blacks; and,
  • A trip to Asia in 1953 had opened his eyes to the perceived consequences of colonialism and imperialism.

Political career

In 1953, Palme was recruited by the social democratic prime minister Tage Erlander to work in his secretariat. From 1955 he was a board member of the Swedish Social Democratic Youth League and lectured at the Youth League College Bommersvik.

In 1957 he was elected as an MP (Swedish: riksdagsledamot).[4]

Olof Palme held several cabinet posts from 1963. In 1967 he became Minister of Education, and the following year, he was the target of strong criticism from left-wing students protesting against the government's plans for university reform. When party leader Tage Erlander stepped down in 1969, Palme was elected as the new leader by the Social Democratic party congress and succeeded Erlander as Prime Minister.

Palme became, alongside Raoul Wallenberg and Dag Hammarskjöld, the most internationally-known Swedish politician of the 20th century, on account of his 125-month tenure as Prime Minister, fierce opposition to American foreign policy and his assassination.[5][6]

His protégé and political ally, Bernt Carlsson, who was appointed UN Commissioner for Namibia in July 1987, also suffered an untimely death. Carlsson was killed in the Pan Am Flight 103 crash on December 21, 1988 en route to the UN signing ceremony in New York the following day.

Policies

Olof Palme at Norra Bantorget, May Day 1973

As leader of a new generation of Swedish Social Democrats, Olof Palme was often described as a "revolutionary reformist".[7][8] Domestically, his socialist views – especially the Social Democrat drive to expand Labour Union influence over business – engendered a great deal of hostility from more conservatively inclined Swedes. Shortly before his assassination, Palme had been accused of being pro-Soviet and not sufficiently safeguarding Sweden's national interest. Arrangements had therefore been made for him to go to Moscow to discuss a number of contentious bilateral issues, including alleged Soviet submarine incursions into Swedish waters (see U 137).

On the international scene, Palme was a political figure because of his:

All of this ensured that Palme had many opponents (as well as many friends) abroad.

On 21 February 1968, Palme (then Minister of Education) participated in a protest in Stockholm against the U.S.A. involvement in the war in Vietnam together with the North Vietnamese Ambassador to the Soviet Union Nguyen Tho Chan. The protest was organized by the Swedish Committee for Vietnam and Palme and Nguyen were both invited as speakers. As a result of this, the U.S.A. recalled its Ambassador from Sweden and Palme was fiercly criticised by the opposition for his participation in the protest.[9]

On 23 December 1972, Palme (then Prime Minister) made a speech in Swedish national radio where he compared the ongoing U.S. bombings of Hanoi to a number of historical atrocities, namely the bombing of Guernica, the massacres of Oradour-sur-Glane, Babi Yar, Katyn, Lidice and Sharpeville, and the extermination of Jews and other groups at Treblinka. The U.S.A. government called the comparison a "gross insult" and once again decided to freeze its diplomatic relations with Sweden (this time the freeze lasted for over a year).[9]

Despite such associations and contrary to stated Social Democratic Party policy, Sweden had in fact secretly maintained extensive military co-operation with the West over a long period, and was even under the protection of a USA military security guarantee (see Swedish neutrality during the Cold War). Palme was said to have had a profound impact on people's emotions; he was very popular among many on the left, but equally detested by the right.[10] This was due in part to his international activities, especially those directed against the United States, and in part to his aggressive and outspoken debating style.[11][12]

Asked about Palme, former USA Secretary of State Henry Kissinger once answered that he usually disliked the people he agreed with and liked the people he disagreed with, adding dryly: "So Palme, I liked - a lot" .[citation needed],

Assassination

Olof Palme could often be seen without any bodyguard protection, and the night of his murder was one such occasion. Walking home from a cinema with his wife Lisbet Palme on the central Stockholm street Sveavägen, close to midnight on February 28, 1986, the couple were attacked by a gunman. Palme was fatally shot in the back at close range 23:21 CET. A second shot wounded Lisbet Palme.

Police said that a taxi-driver used his mobile radio to raise the alarm. Two young girls sitting in a car close to the scene of the shooting also tried to help the prime minister. He was rushed to hospital but was pronounced dead on arrival at 00:06 CET on March 1, 1986. Mrs Palme's wound was treated and she recovered.

Deputy prime minister Ingvar Carlsson immediately assumed the duties as prime minister and as new leader of the Social Democratic Party.

Memorials

Plaque commemorating exact spot of Palme's murder. In Swedish, the text reads "På denna plats mördades Sveriges statsminister Olof Palme den 28 februari 1986", which, in English, translates to "On this spot Sweden's Prime Minister Olof Palme was murdered on 28 February 1986"
Palme's grave and monument at nearby Adolf Fredriks kyrka's cemetery

The Olof Palme Memorial Fund

The Olof Palme Memorial Fund for International Understanding and Common Security was established by Olof Palme's family and by the Social Democratic Party to honour his memory.

References

  1. ^ Nordstrom, Byron (2000). Scandinavia Since 1500. University of Minnesota Press, pg. 347. "The February 1986 murder of Sweden's Prime Minister Olof Palme near Sergelstorget in the middle of Stockholm's downtown shocked the nation and region. Political assassinations were virtually unheard-of in Scandinavia."
  2. ^ Kenyon College Web page[1]
  3. ^ Hendrik Hertzberg, “Death of a Patriot”, in: Idem, Politics. Observations and Arguments, 1966-2004 (New York: The Penguin Press, 2004) 263-266, there 264
  4. ^ Elected as an MP
  5. ^ Time: Sweden's Olof Palme: "Neutral But Not Silent"
  6. ^ Castro Praises Swedish Achievements
  7. ^ Dagens Nyheter 2007-01-23
  8. ^ "Detta borde vara vårt arv" by Åsa Linderborg, Aftonbladet 2006-02-28
  9. ^ a b Andersson, Stellan. "Olof Palme och Vietnamfrågan 1965-1983" (in Swedish). olofpalme.org. Retrieved 2008-02-27.
  10. ^ Einhorn, Eric and John Logue (1989). Modern Welfare States: Politics and Policies in Social Democratic Scandinavia. Praeger Publishers, pg 60. ISBN 0275931889 "Olof Palme was perhaps the most 'presidential' Scandinavian leader in recent decades, a fact that may have made him vulnerable to political violence."
  11. ^ "Han gödslade jorden så att Palmehatet kunde växa", Dagens Nyheter, 25 February, 2006
  12. ^ Olof Palme: the controversy lives on, The Local, 27 February, 2006

See also

Preceded by Minister for Communications
1965–1967
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister for Education
1967–1969
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Sweden
1969–1976
Succeeded by
Leader of the Swedish Social Democratic Party
1969–1986
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Sweden
1982–1986