MONTPELIER, Vt. — A man who renounced his U.S. citizenship in 1948 and for the next six decades led a movement for global citizenship has died in Vermont, his organization said.
The World Service Authority, the administrative wing of the World Government of World Citizens, confirmed that founder Garry Davis died Wednesday in Williston. He was 91.
The group's main goal is "creating institutions of law at the global level that will allow every human being to live together peacefully," David Gallup, president and general counsel of the Washington-based World Service Authority, said in an interview Monday.
Davis' work stretched from his dramatic declaration of world citizenship in Paris in 1948 to his organization's recent granting of a "world passport" to former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden.
His activism was born of grief over his brother's death in World War II and guilt over his own role as a bomber pilot.
Davis wrote that he thought as he flew bombing missions over Brandenburg, Germany, that he was avenging the death of his brother, who died in the Allied invasion of Italy.
"But it didn't help," he wrote. "Because I couldn't forget those civilians who died under my bombs."
The war traumatized Davis, his son, Troy, said in an interview. The younger Davis, a lecturer in political science at universities in Strasbourg, France, and Freiburg, Germany, added that his father "sublimated his trauma into trying to figure out, how can this system end?"