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Hans Panofsky Obituary

Panofsky, HansE. Librarian and curator from 1959 to 1990 of the Melville J. Herskovits Library of African Studies at Northwestern University, died peacefully on July 1, 2013 in Madison, Wisconsin with family at his side. He was 87. Hans was born January 30, 1926 in Berlin, Germany. There, he lived at 27a Tiergartenstrasse, an address made famous through Erik Larson's book, In the Garden of Beasts. From 1933 until 1936, Hans' father Alfred, a partner in a small investment bank, rented the first three floors of the familyhometo William Dodd, US ambassador to Germany, while keeping the upper floor for the Panofsky household. By summer 1938, it was decided that Hans, age 12, and younger sister Ruth were no longer safe in Germany and were sent to England. Some months later, Hans' parents and grandmother fled Germany, joining Hans and Ruth, and resettling as stateless refugees. In 1944 Hans enlisted in the British army to fight the Nazis. Hans began his post-secondary education at theLondon School of Economics. There, socialist visionary Harold Laski became one of Hans' most influential mentors.Also during this time, Hans first developed friendships with African students and a lifelong interest in Africa and Africanist scholarship was born. In 1948, Hans, with his father, sister and stepmother relocated to New York.Hans obtained a BS in sociology and a Masters in library science from Columbia University. Later, he earned aMasters degree in labor economics at the New York State School of Industrial and Labor Relations at Cornell University. In Ithaca in 1957 Hans met his future wife, Gianna Sommi, a visiting Fullbright scholar from Italy.The following summer they married in Parma, Italy, and shortly thereafter Hans accepted a position in Northwestern University's fledgling Program of African Studies to work with Professor Melville Herskovits. Hans became Africana curator in the spring of 1959. At Northwestern, Hans built the Africanacollection with energy, vision and imagination and is credited with having assembled the largest collection of printed materials on Africa in the world, drawing scholars to Northwestern University. Hans also possessed an extremely useful skill: an uncanny ability, (long pre-internet) to connect people with other people, information and resources that were oftentimes obscure and otherwise unlikely links to be made. In 1985, the African Studies Association honored Hans with its Distinguished Service Award.Hans' scholarly contributions includea thesis on labor migration and the Ghanaian economy;a Bibliography of Africana; chairing the Anthropology section of the American Library Association; and writing numerous reviews in scholarly journals. The Program of African Studies at Northwestern established the Hans E. Panofsky Pre-dissertation Research Award to support Northwestern graduate students planning to do fieldwork or archival research in Africa. From 1962 until 2010, HansandGianna's home at 1229 Judson Avenue became an oasis for Africanists, intellectuals, academics and friends; a place known for lively discourse; a home cooked meal or a game of Briscola. Hans andGianna shared a deep interest in social justice and were active in the civil and human rights movements. Hans volunteered with the local Amnesty International group and served on numerous boards including Toward Freedom and theChicago chapter oftheNAACP. In February 2010 after Gianna's death, Hans moved to Madison, Wisconsin to be closer to family. There, he lived until his death at Capitol Lakes Retirement in Madison's downtown. Hans was preceded in death by his wife, GiannaSommiPanofsky and is survived by his sister Ruth, (Panofsky) Barnett and brother-in-law, Alan of Mill Valley California and family; two sons, John Panofsky of Göteborg, Sweden and David Panofsky of Madison, Wisconsin; daughters-in-law, Helena Nyman Panofsky of Göteborg and Pat Smith of Madison; and four grandchildren, Sophia, Nora, Martin, and Sylvie. A memorial celebration will be held on November 2nd, 2013 at 10:00 a.m. at the Alice Millar Chapel, 1870 Sheridan Road, Evanston, Illinois.

To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.

Published by Evanston Review from Oct. 24 to Oct. 30, 2013.

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Brenda Simms and family

October 24, 2013

I had the pleasure of working with Hans and his son John for many years at Northwestern University Library. You never saw a sad face on either one always a warm smile. Hans was always an uplifting person. He never had a bad word to say about anyone or anything. He will be so missed. My heart and prayers go out to the family.

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