On April 14th, The man who put war on trial at Nuremberg posthumously receives Congressional Gold Medal.
Benjamin Ferencz lived in Delray Beach, Florida.
By Steven Jay, Creative Director
In 1945, a 27-year-old lawyer helped prove a radical idea after World War II:
👉 War crimes can be prosecuted—not just fought.
That lawyer was Benjamin Ferencz.
- At the Nuremberg Trials, Ferencz led the prosecution of Nazi death squads.
- His case: well over 1 million murders, proven largely through documents.
- Outcome: unanimous guilty verdicts.
No revenge. No spectacle. Just evidence.
Why it mattered
It changed the rules of the system:
- Individuals—not just nations—can be held accountable
- “Crimes against humanity” became enforceable
- Law entered a space previously dominated by war
This helped inspire the creation of the International Criminal Court.
The gap today
We have the blueprint. We’re not scaling it.
- The United States is not a member of the ICC
- Conflicts are rising globally
- Civilian exposure remains high
The issue isn’t knowledge.
It’s implementation.
Flip the script
Ferencz’s model challenges the old operating system:
Old pattern:
War → retaliation → escalation
New possibility:
Law → accountability → prevention
Systems insight
This is bigger than history.
It’s a systems design question:
- Do we resolve conflict through force…
- Or through shared legal infrastructure?
Ferencz’s life suggests:
👉 Justice can scale—if institutions and nations choose to align.
What leaders should consider now
- Expand participation in global legal frameworks
- Strengthen enforcement mechanisms across borders
- Integrate legal accountability into geopolitical strategy
📊 Bottom line
War is not the only tool. It’s just the default one.
Ferencz proved another option exists:
👉 Law as infrastructure for peace