Gandhi Peace Award: Difference between revisions
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|title=Gandhi Peace Award |
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<ref name="award - Cortright/Jacob">{{cite web |
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|url=http://www.fourthfreedom.org/pdf/Gandhi_Peace_Award.pdf |
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|title=Cortright and Jacob Receive Gandhi Peace Award |
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|work=fourthfreedom.org |
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|year=2004 |
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|accessdate=18 November 2010 |
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|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20060929175825/http://www.fourthfreedom.org/pdf/Gandhi_Peace_Award.pdf |
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<ref name="award - Bandel/Ascherman">{{cite web |
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|url=http://pepeace.org/journal/2011/5/2/promoting-enduring-peace-presents-gandhi-award-to-rabbis-for.html |
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|title=Promoting Enduring Peace presents Gandhi Award to Rabbis for Human Rights |
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|publisher=[[Promoting Enduring Peace]] |
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|date=May 2, 2011 |
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|accessdate=May 4, 2011 |
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|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110519213719/http://pepeace.org:80/journal/2011/5/2/promoting-enduring-peace-presents-gandhi-award-to-rabbis-for.html |
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Revision as of 18:13, 7 January 2017
The Gandhi Peace Award is an award and cash prize presented annually since 1960 by Promoting Enduring Peace to individuals for "contributions made in the promotion of international peace and good will." It is named in honor of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi[1] but has no explicit connection to Mohandas Gandhi or any other member of the Gandhi family.
Recent Award winners include Ralph Nader (2016), Tom B.K. Goldtooth and Kathy Kelly (2015) and Medea Benjamin (2014).
Since 1960, when the first Award was given to Eleanor Roosevelt, the Award has been presented to "peace heroes" who, in the view of Promoting Enduring Peace, have exemplified the courage of nonviolent resistance to abusive power, armed conflict, and violent oppression. The Award is also intended to recognize individuals for having made significant contributions, through cooperative and non-violent means in the spirit of Gandhi, to the struggle to achieve a sustainable world civilization founded on enduring international peace.
In the 21st Century the Award is especially intended by its presenters to honor those whose lives and works exemplify the principle that international peace, universal socioeconomic justice, and global environmental harmony are interdependent and inseparable, and all three are essential to the survival of civilization.
The Award itself is symbolized by a heavy medallion and a certificate with an inscription summing up the recipient's work. The medallion, forged from Peace Bronze (a metal rendered from decommissioned nuclear missile command systems, evoking "swords into plowshares"), features Gandhi's profile and his words "Love Ever Suffers/Never Revenges Itself" cast in bronze. The Award has been presented at a ceremony held typically once a year in New York or New Haven at which the recipient is invited to present a message of challenge and hope.
History
The Gandhi Peace Award was conceived by Promoting Enduring Peace’s founder, Yale Professor Jerome Davis. Davis first proposed the award to the board of Promoting Enduring Peace on 13 March 1959, with the name intended to pay tribute to the modern era's foremost advocate of nonviolent resistance, and partly to help rectify the failure of the Nobel Committee to award its Peace Prize to Gandhi before his death in 1948. The Award has been issued since 1960, when it was first presented to Eleanor Roosevelt, and consists of a certificate, a ceremony, and the presentation of a bronze medallion inscribed with a quotation by Gandhi, "Love Ever Suffers / Never Revenges Itself."[1] A prominent New York sculptor, Don Benaron/Katz, was commissioned to create a work of art to serve as the symbol of the Award. He researched Gandhi at the library of the India House in New York City and by 1960 had carved a striking bas-relief portrait in wood of the founder of the century’s international movement for nonviolent change. He wrote of the medallion he also created, “I carved the Gujarati word for peace on one side, and on the other a symbolic plowshare and pruning hook inspired by Isaiah 2:4...″
- They shall beat their swords into plowshares
- and their spears into pruning hooks;
- nation shall not lift up sword against nation,
- neither shall they learn war any more.
Some Notable Winners
Promoting Enduring Peace announced in January 2014 that the Gandhi Peace Award winner was Medea Benjamin.
The 2013 Award was presented to Bill McKibben who is one of the most well-known leaders of the environmentalist movement in the United States. His first book was The End of Nature published in 1989. An activist and journalist, his work has appeared in The Atlantic Monthly, Harper's Magazine, Mother Jones, and Rolling Stone. (His acceptance speech may be viewed here.)
In 2012 the Award was presented to Amy Goodman for her contribution to promoting a sustainable peace through the promotion of transparently truthful journalism—one essential part of which is to report the true nature and long-term after-effects of war. Goodman is an internationally known broadcast journalist, syndicated columnist, investigative reporter, author, and the anchor and co-founder of Democracy Now!, an independent global news program broadcast daily on radio and television and via the Internet. (Her acceptance speech may be viewed here.)
In 2011 the Award was presented to Rabbi Ehud Bandel and Rabbi Arik Ascherman for their leadership of Rabbis for Human Rights and its nonviolent resistance to the persecution of Palestinians in the occupied territories. (Their acceptance speeches may be viewed here.)
In 1989 the Award was presented to César Chávez, founder of the United Farm Workers of America, for his use of nonviolent tactics, including a national consumer boycott, to improve the conditions and compensation for migrant farm workers. (His acceptance speech may be viewed here.)
Gandhi Peace Award Laureates
^ * Martin Luther King, Jr. was designated to receive the Award in 1964 and did formally accept it, but shortly thereafter was designated as the Nobel Peace Prize Laureate for that year. Thereafter he was unable to attend a ceremony for the formal presentation of the Award.
^ ** Daniel Berrigan formally accepted the Award. Shortly thereafter he made remarks critical of Israeli treatment of Palestinians that led to internal discussions of rescinding the Award. Although the organization rejected that course, Fr. Berrigan heard about it and resigned the Award.
- Sources
- "Gandhi Peace Award Recipients". Promoting Enduring Peace. n.d. Retrieved 2009-11-13.
See also
References
- ^ a b "Gandhi Peace Award". pepeace.org. Archived from the original on 8 October 2010. Retrieved 18 November 2010.
{{cite web}}
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{{cite web}}
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External links
- pepeace.org/gandhi-peace-award (official website)