Ilmar Tammelo February 25, 1917 Narva - February 7, 1982 Sydney.............
09 Feb 2013 EWR Online
Ahead of Estonia's 95th Independence Day on February 24, the Heritage Society has proposed starting a new tradition of lighting candles on the graves of great figures of Estonian culture and society in the month of February, ERR News reported. http://news.postimees.ee/11298...
Author: D.M. Helmeste, PhD, Ilmar Tammelo February 25, 1917 Narva - February 7, 1982 Sydney was a world-renowned professor of law philosophy. Impressed with his work, the British philosopher Bertrand Russell wrote him a letter of recommendation. His research included work on heritage law, philosophy, theory, and international law which brought him worldwide fame. Justice problems were among Tammelo’s interests for nearly 30 years. “Õiglus ja hool” (photo 1) is one of over twenty books written by or about Tammelo.
Unfortunately, his early childhood was marred by tragedy. His father, school teacher and mayor of Narva, was one of the many casualties during the Estonian War of Independence. The story continues with mother Johanna and her two small boys (Richard and Ilmar) travelling during wartime by foot from Narva to Puhja (near Tartu) where Johanna’s sister (my grandmother Minna) lived with her pharmacist husband and children. My grandfather (Richard Helmeste) treated Ilmar like a second son and Ilmar spent his elementary school years in Puhja with my father’s family (http://isik.tlulib.ee/index.ph.... His later career in law was no doubt influenced in part by his mother’s brother (Jaan Treufeldt), industrialist/politician, newspaper publisher and lawyer. However, as was too common in that era, Treufeldt’s successful career made him a target for deportation to Siberia in the early 1940s. As recorded by the Estonian writer Jaan Kross, it was during this period that the two Estonians (JK and JT) became friends. But ill health would cut Ilmar Tammelo’s career cruelly short. Thirty-one years have passed but I remember Ilmar’s Toronto visit in the autumn of 1981 very well. In Toronto to lecture at the University of Toronto (Tartu College), Ilmar had been able to meet me for coffee since I was a university graduate student there at the time. My parents still lived in Montreal but Ilmar had been diligent and met my father (his closest cousin) there as well (photo 2: Early visit by Ilmar Tammelo to Helmeste family in Montreal, 1957: author is the tiny girl sitting on bench). I remember the sad quietness about him at the time but he had kept people in the dark about his cancer diagnosis and its progression. Coffee in Toronto....then several weeks passed by and he was dead. Luckily, Ilmar's brother (Richard) and nephew (Risto Tammelo from Tartu, Estonia and future Physics Professor there) had prearranged to visit Ilmar in Salzburg, Austria one last time after his Toronto visit. As the cancer progressed and death seemed imminent, Ilmar was flown back to Sydney, Australia where his second wife Lyn lived and he could see his best friend Dr. Felix Ruut. Then on February 7, 1982 he disappeared from the face of this Earth and his burial place was shrouded in secrecy for more than a quarter of a century.
Careful inquiries by relatives as recently as five years ago had led to no results about where Ilmar’s grave may be located. Being interested in this problem, I recently took up this investigation and after several inquiries to England and Australia came to the conclusion that Ilmar Tammelo’s ashes are likely to be located in section MG15197, Northern Suburbs Crematorium, 199 Delhi Road, North Ryde, NSW 2113, which is a suburban area of Sydney (Australia). However, I have not been able to obtain photographic proof. It would be sad to leave this problem unresolved due to the negligence or unsound mind of now-deceased individuals. My hope is that sometime during this month of February, someone in the Sydney area can visit the site and send photographic proof that section MG15197 is indeed the final resting place for Ilmar Tammelo’s ashes. A posting to eesti.ca online newspaper would be helpful. Ilmar Tammelo’s grave site deserves to be remembered with candles just like the other Estonian notables whom we celebrate this fine month of February in the year 2013.