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Conradin Perner (2019)

Conradin Perner, born in Davos on the 31st of August 1943, is a Swiss humanist, researcher, and author. He became known for his work as a literature professor, ethnographer, delegate of the International Committee of the Red Cross as well as through his engagement in South Sudan. As part of his ethnographic work, he lived with the Anyuak tribe in South Sudan for seven years and wrote a comprehensive monograph on the life and culture of the Anyuak.  Later, he worked for many years as peace advisor to the Swiss government in the then greater Sudan.

Life and work[edit]

After studying literature in France, Sweden and Zurich, Perner wrote his dissertation in comparative literature on: “Gunnar Ekelof’s night on the horizon and his encounter with Stephane Mallarme”. From 1969 to 1971, he taught French language and literature at the University of Kisangani. He then worked for three years as a delegate for the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in Bangladesh, Vietnam and India.

Perner took over the Chair for French literature at the University of Khartoum from the end of 1974 until 1976. That’s when he organized his first trip to South Sudan in preparation for a research project on oral literature. From 1976 to 1983, he conducted research among the Anyuak tribe in South Sudan, sponsored by the University of Zurich and the Swiss National Fund for Scientific Research. The result of his life and work among the Anyuak is an eight-volume monograph, a four-volume dictionary, a Grammar guide, and a collection of Anyuak legends, love songs, satirical verses, and parables.  The Anyuak gave him the name of “Kwacakworo”.

From 1989 to 1992, Perner resumed working as an ICRC delegate in Sudan and later as the head of the ICRC delegation in Lokichoko, Kenya. Perner is known for his crucial role in the rescue of nearly ten thousand child soldiers, known as the lost boys, in their escape from camps in Ethiopia to South Sudan. From 1993 to 1994, he was an advisor to the ICRC, UNICEF and 45 other organizations active in South Sudan. From 1995 to 2000 he continued with the ICRC and was posted in Afghanistan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and in the Republic of Congo (Brazzaville).

In 2002, Perner was the first commander of the Joint Military Commission in the SPLA sector in the Nuba-Mountains in Sudan. He played an instrumental role in the peace efforts in South Sudan and received South Sudan’s first honorary citizenship in 2011.

Perner has worked as a visiting professor at the University of Paris-Nanterre and the Sorbonne University in Paris as well as an advisor to the Swiss Ministry of Foreign Affairs (FDFA) for peacebuilding in South Sudan’s House of Nationalities Project. He wrote extensive documentation for the FDFA on peacebuilding approaches across all South Sudanese tribes.

Today he lives in Davos where he still dedicates his time to writing and producing various philosophical essays and stories about his work and his life.

Publications[edit]

  • Living on Earth in the Sky: the Anyuak. An analytic account of the history and culture of a Nilotic people. holistische Monografie, Zusammenfassung der Forschungsresultate in 8 Bänden, Helbing & Lichtenhahn Verlag, Basel 1994–1996 (Vol. I – The Sphere of Spirituality ISBN 3-7190-1330-8, Vol. II – The Human Territory ISBN 3-7190-1507-6) und Schwabe-Verlag, Basel, 2003–2016 (Vol. III – The Human Being ISBN 3-7965-1272-0, Vol. IV – A personal Life ISBN 978-3-7965-2227-7, Vol. V – The Anyuak Village – Centre of Civilisation (on Social Structures and Justice) ISBN 978-3-7965-3211-5, Vol. VI – The Political Body: Power and Authority ISBN 978-3-7965-3402-7, Vol. VII – Spheres of Action, Anyuak Art ISBN 978-3-7965-3465-2, Vol. VIII – Anyuak Histories. With a Bibliography ISBN 978-3-7965-3552-9).
  • Anyuak Religion. In: Journal of Religion in Africa. Vol. II, Leeds, 1992.
  • Anyuak – A Luo Language of the Southern Sudan: Dictionary and short Grammar. Human Relations Area Files Inc., Yale, 1990.
  • Why did you come if you leave again? An Ethnographer's Footprints among the Anyuak in South Sudan. Autobiographie, erschienen in Farbe, schwarzweiß und als E-Book, Xlibris-Verlag, Bloomington, USA, 2016/2017
  • Valeurs et fonctions de la terre. In: Bulletin annuel du Musée d’Ethnographie de le Ville de Genève, No.21–22, Genève, 1978–1979.
  • But You Know, Darkness is a Big Thing. A background-report on family attitudes and sexual behaviour in South Sudan. Unicef, Nairobi, 2001.
  • Jeder Schritt ein Abenteuer!, Erinnerungen eines IKRK-Veteranen, Autobiographie über die Zeit als Delegierter des IKRK im Südsudan, in Zentralasien, in Afghanistan und im Kongo-Brazzaville, 2018
  • Die Anyuak – Bedrohtes Grenzvolk zwischen dem Sudan und Äthiopien, mit Oswald Iten. In: Neue Zürcher Zeitung, Nr. 247, S. 81–85, Zürich, 10. Februar 1983.
  • The Reward of Life is Death: Warfare and the Anyuak on the Ethiopian-Sudanese Border In: Conflicts in the Horn of Africa: human and ecological consequences of warfare. Tarje Tvedt (Hg.), Uppsala, 1993.
  • Gunnar Ekelöfs Nacht am Horizont und seine Begegnung mit Stéphane Mallarmé. Helbing & Lichtenhahn, Basel 1974, ISBN 978-3-7190-0631-0.

Weblinks[edit]

  • Works by or about Webdesign-Davos/Conradin Perner in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
  • Fokusgespräch mit Conradin Perner, Literaturprofessor und Abenteurer auf srf.ch
  • "Webseite von Conradin Perner". Retrieved 2019-09-03.

References[edit]


[[Category:1943 births]] [[Category:Swiss people]]