Friday, May 18, 2012

Jack Kevorkian biography


Jack Kevorkian biography

 1 photo

QUICK FACTS

  • NAME: Jack Kevorkian
  • OCCUPATION: Doctor
  • BIRTH DATE: May 261928 (Age: 83)
  • PLACE OF BIRTH: Pontiac, Michigan
  • ORIGINALLY: Murad Kevorkian
more about Jack

BEST KNOWN FOR

Pathologist Jack Kevorkian is famous for supporting and assisting terminal patient's death via physician-assisted suicide. 

Synopsis

Pathologist Jack Kevorkian is best known for assisting terminal patient's death via physician-assisted suicide. As a young man, he was curiosity about death and wrote about it academically throughout his life. In 1999, Kevorkian began a 10-to-25 year prison sentence for second-degree murder. In 2007, he was let out on parole under the condition that he would not offer suicide advice to anyone. 

QUOTES

"Dying is not a crime."
– Jack Kevorkian

Familly

Physician. Born Murad Kevorkian on May 26, 1928, in Pontiac, Michigan, the second of three children born to Armenian immigrants Levon and Satenig Kevorkian. Kevorkian's parents were refugees who escaped the Armemian massacres that occurred shortly after World War I. Levon was smuggled out of Turkey by missionaries in 1912 and made his way to Pontiac, Michigan, where he found work at an automobile foundry. Satenig fled the Armenian death march, finding refuge with relatives in Paris, and eventually reuniting with her brother in Pontiac. Levon and Satenig met through the Armenian community in their city, where they married and began their family. The couple welcomed a daughter, Margaret, in 1926, followed by son Murad—who later earned the nickname "Jack" by American friends and teachers—and, finally, third child Flora.
After Levon lost his job at the foundry in the early 1930s, he began making a sizeable living as the owner of his own excavating company—a difficult feat in Depression-era America. While other families suffered financially, the Kevorkians began living a more comfortable life in a bucolic, multi-cultural suburb in Pontiac. "My parents sacrificed a great deal so that we children would be spared undue privation and misery," Kevorkian later wrote. "There was always enough to eat."

Strict Upbringing

Levon and Satenig were strict and religious parents, who worked hard to make sure their children were obedient Christians. Jack, however, had trouble reconciling what he believed were conflicting religious ideas. His family regularly attended church, and Jack often railed against the idea of miracles and an all-knowing God in his weekly Sunday school class. If there were a God who could make his son walk on water, Kevorkian insisted, he would also have been able to prevent the Turkish slaughter of his entire extended family. Jack debated the idea of God's existence every week until he realized he would not find an acceptable explanation to his questions, and stopped attending church entirely by the age of 12. 

The children were also encouraged to perform well in school, and all three demonstrated high academic intelligence—as the only boy, however, Jack became the focus of Levon and Satenig's high expectations. Jack rose to the occasion easily; even as a young boy, Kevorkian was a voracious reader and academic who loved the arts, including drawing, painting and piano. But along with Jack's academic prowess came a highly critical mind, and he rarely accepted ideas at face value. He engaged in frequent arguments with his teachers at school, sometimes humiliating them when they couldn't keep up with his sharp debate skills. While his jabs at teachers earned admiration from his classmates, learning came so effortlessly to Jack that it often alienated him from his peers. Kevorkian was promoted to Eastern Junior High School when he was in the sixth grade, and by the time he was in high school he had taught

No comments:

Post a Comment