Born in Schaarbeek (Brussels), 1899
Paul-Henri
Spaak took a degree in jurisprudence at Brussels University.
He became a Socialist Member of Parliament for Brussels
in 1932 and subsequently Minister of Transport and of
PTT. He moved from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to
become Prime Minister from 1938 to 1939. After the war,
which he spent with the Belgian Government in exile in
London, he was agian Minister of Foreign Affairs and Prime
Minister from 1947 to 1949. In 1949 he presided over the
first General Assembly of the United Nations.
In
1949 he was Chairman of the first session of the Consultative
Assembly of the Council of Europe and from 1952 to 1953
President of the General Assembly of the European Coal
and Steel Community. in 1956 he was chosen by the Council
of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation to succeed Lord
Ismay as Secretary General. He resigned from the post
in March 1961 in order to resume his political career
in the service of his own country and again became Foreign
Minister of Belgium. Paul-Henri Spaak was also President
of the Royal Belgian Academy of French Language and Literature.
He was succeeded as Secretary General of NATO in April
1961 by Dirk Stikker. He died
in 1972.
|