Simone Veil, former French health minister, women’s champion, social reformer and president of the European Parliament, passed away last week. Her death came shortly before the funeral of Helmut Kohl, the German chancellor who presided over the unification of his country.
Ms Veil survived Auschwitz. Mr Kohl could be insensitive to the Nazis’ victims, pressing US president Ronald Reagan to visit a cemetery where SS members were buried. But he strove to ensure Germany’s peaceful future in Europe and its reconciliation with old enemies. He helped reshape a continent.
Kohl succeeded two chancellors whose seriousness and stature remain vivid in the memories of those of us in the generation after theirs: Willy Brandt, who died in 1992, and Helmut Schmidt who passed away in 2015. All these leaders had their flaws, human and political. But they were a towering generation. Where do we find their like today?