Kurt Lustenberger was born on 9 August 1961 in Sursee, midway between Zurich and Bern, where he attended primary and lower secondary school. He completed his secondary studies in 1978 at the Institut Catholique in nearby Neuchâtel, with a focus on both business studies and French – his French diploma was co-issued by the Paris-based Alliance Française. Kurt then enrolled in a vocational training programme, spending three years, from 1978 to 1981, as an apprentice in a bank back in Sursee.
Having completed his training, Kurt took on a three-month temp position with Orell Füssli AG, in Zurich. He then travelled to Asia for seven months, visiting South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore and Sri Lanka. When he returned to Switzerland, he accepted a position as an accountant with EniChemicals SA in Kilchberg, near Zurich. He worked there for two years, from November 1982 to October 1984, after which he enrolled in a three-year marketing programme at the ESCEA business school in Fribourg. In 1987, marketing diploma in hand, Kurt was employed briefly at Firestone before being hired as a project manager at DemoSCOPE SA, a social and market research institute, in Adligenswil, near Lucerne. Four years later, Kurt felt the need to move on.
When he applied to the ICRC in August 1992, Kurt was ready to sign on the dotted line. He saw in the organization an opportunity to orient his career towards helping others as part of a team. At his job interview in October, where the ICRC already recognized his leadership potential, he expressed an interest in becoming an administrator, a position with a wide range of tasks. He was subsequently invited to, and completed, the ICRC delegate training course in November.
Kurt’s first assignment was in Bardere, in south-western Somalia, a country caught up in a civil war. He was given the position of administrator – as he’d hoped – and he carried out his role with skill and sensitivity. He found the work satisfying, and his warm-hearted nature endeared him to those around him. In a letter he wrote in January 1993, not long after arriving in Somalia, Kurt said he felt the work he was doing made a difference.
On the evening of 14 January 1993, several weeks into his assignment, Kurt was having dinner with four other ICRC international staff members at their residence when three armed men broke in, demanding money from the safe. Kurt was retrieving the key to the safe when one of the men shot him in the head. Kurt was quickly transferred by helicopter to Mogadishu, but died en route to hospital. He was 31 years old.
Kurt made a conscious decision to set aside a comfortable career in Switzerland in order to help those suffering as a result of armed conflict. In a message to Kurt’s parents, his colleagues at the Mogadishu delegation wrote: "Your understanding of Kurt's choice for our work gives us the strength to turn our frustration and despair over his death into renewed perseverance and purpose.” Kurt was posthumously awarded the Henry Dunant medal.