President Obama Wins Nobel Peace Prize
October 9, 2009
Obama is the third sitting U.S. president to win the award: President
Theodore Roosevelt won in 1906 and President Woodrow Wilson was awarded the prize in 1919.
Obama has as President created a new climate in international politics. Multilateral
diplomacy has regained a central position, with emphasis on the role that the United
Nations and other international institutions can play. Dialogue and negotiations are
preferred as instruments for resolving even the most difficult international conflicts.
The vision of a world free from nuclear arms has powerfully stimulated disarmament and
arms control negotiations. Thanks to Obama's initiative, the USA is now playing a more
constructive role in meeting the great climatic challenges the world is confronting.
Democracy and human rights are to be strengthened.
President Obama:
We cannot tolerate a world in which nuclear weapons spread to more nations and in which the terror of
a nuclear holocaust endangers more people. And that's why we've begun to take concrete steps to
pursue a world without nuclear weapons: because all nations have the right to pursue peaceful nuclear
power, but all nations have the responsibility to demonstrate their peaceful intentions. We cannot accept
the growing threat posed by climate change, which could forever damage the world that we pass on to
our children, sowing conflict and famine, destroying coastlines and emptying cities.
Watch his remarks on winning this prize
Download his remarks
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People of Color who won the Nobel Peace Prize
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Activist: WANGARI MAATHAI
2004 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
The Norwegian Nobel Committee has decided to award the Nobel Peace Prize for 2004 to Wangari Maathai for
her contribution to sustainable development, democracy and peace. Peace on earth depends on our ability to
secure our living environment. Maathai stands at the front of the fight to promote ecologically viable social,
economic and cultural development in Kenya and in Africa. She has taken a holistic approach to sustainable
development that embraces democracy, human rights and women's rights in particular. She thinks globally and acts locally.
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United Nations Secretary General: KOFI ANNAN
2001 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
The Norwegian Nobel Committee has decided to award the Nobel Peace Prize for 2001,
in two equal portions, to the United Nations (U.N.) and to its Secretary-General, Kofi Annan,
for their work for a better organized and more peaceful world. For one hundred years, the Norwegian Nobel
Committee has sought to strengthen organized cooperation between states. The end of the cold war has at last
made it possible for the U.N. to perform more fully the part it was originally intended to play. Today the
organization is at the forefront of efforts to achieve peace and security in the world, and of the international
mobilization aimed at meeting the world's economic, social and environmental challenges.
Kofi Annan:
In the 21st Century I believe the mission of the United Nations will be defined by a new, more profound,
awareness of the sanctity and dignity of every human life, regardless of race or religion. This will require us to
look beyond the framework of States, and beneath the surface of nations or communities. We must focus, as never before,
on improving the conditions of the individual men and women who give the state or nation its richness and character.
We must begin with the young Afghan girl, recognizing that saving that one life is to save humanity itself.
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Activist: NELSON MANDELA
1993 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
The Norwegian Nobel Committee has decided to award the Nobel Peace Prize for 1993 to Nelson R. Mandela
and Frederik Willem de Klerk for their work for the peaceful termination of the apartheid regime, and
for laying the foundations for a new democratic South Africa. From their different points of departure,
Mandela and de Klerk have reached agreement on the principles for a transition to a new political order
based on the tenet of one man-one vote. By looking ahead to South African reconciliation instead of back
at the deep wounds of the past, they have shown personal integrity and great political courage.
Nelson Mandela:
It will not be presumptuous of us if we also add, among our predecessors, the name of another
outstanding Nobel Peace Prize winner, the late Rev Martin Luther King Jr. He, too, grappled with and died
in the effort to make a contribution to the just solution of the same great issues of the day which we
have had to face as South Africans. We speak here of the challenge of the dichotomies of war and peace,
violence and non-violence, racism and human dignity, oppression and repression and liberty and human
rights, poverty and freedom from want. We stand here today as nothing more than a representative of the
millions of our people who dared to rise up against a social system whose very essence is war, violence,
racism, oppression, repression and the impoverishment of an entire people.
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Activist and Religious Leader: ARCHBISHOP DESMOND TUTU
1984 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
The Committee has attached importance to Desmond Tutu's role as a unifying leader figure in the
campaign to resolve the problem of apartheid in South Africa. The means by which this campaign is
conducted is of vital importance for the whole of the continent of Africa and for the cause of peace
in the world. Through the award of this year's Peace Prize, the Committee wishes to direct attention to
the non-violent struggle for liberation to which Desmond Tutu belongs, a struggle in which black and
white South Africans unite to bring their country out of conflict and crisis.
Desmond Tutu:
In pursuance of apartheid's ideological racist dream, over 3.000.000 of God's children
have been uprooted from their homes, which have been demolished, whilst they have then been dumped in
the bantustan homeland resettlement camps. I say dumped advisedly: only things or rubbish is dumped, not
human beings. Apartheid has, however, ensured that God's children, just because they are black, should be
treated as if they were things, and not as of infinite value as being created in the image of God. These
dumping grounds are far from where work and food can be procured easily. Children starve, suffer from the
often irreversible consequences of malnutrition - this happens to them not accidentally, but by deliberate
Government policy. They starve in a land that could be the bread basket of Africa, a land that normally
is a net exporter of food.
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President of Eygpt: ANWAR AL-SADAT
1978 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Anwar al-Sadat:
Through me it was the eternal Egypt that was expressing itself: Let us put an end to wars,
let us reshape life on the solid basis of equity and truth. And it is this call, which reflected the
will of the Egyptian people, of the great majority of the Arab and Israeli peoples, and indeed of
millions of men, women, and children around the world that you are today honoring. And these hundreds
of millions will judge to what extent every responsible leader in the Middle East has responded to the hopes of mankind.
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Civil Rights Leader: MARTIN LUTHER KING JR.
1964 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
As Gunnar Jahn, Chairman of the Nobel Committee, said in his presentation speech:
He is the first person in the Western world to have shown us that a struggle can be waged
without violence. He is the first to make the message of brotherly love a reality in the course
of his struggle, and he has brought this message to all men, to all nations and races.
Today we pay tribute to Martin Luther King, the man who has never abandoned his faith in the
unarmed struggle he is waging, who has suffered for his faith, who has been imprisoned on
many occasions, whose home has been subject to bomb attacks, whose life and the lives of his
family have been threatened, and who nevertheless has never faltered.
Martin Luther King Jr.:
Every man lives in two realms, the internal and the external. The internal is that realm of
spiritual ends expressed in art, literature, morals, and religion. The external is that complex of
devices, techniques, mechanisms, and instrumentalities by means of which we live. Our problem today
is that we have allowed the internal to become lost in the external. We have allowed the means by
which we live to outdistance the ends for which we live. So much of modern life can be summarized
in that arresting dictum of the poet Thoreau1: Improved means to an unimproved end. This is the
serious predicament, the deep and haunting problem confronting modern man. If we are to survive today,
our moral and spiritual lag must be eliminated. Enlarged material powers spell enlarged peril if there
is not proportionate growth of the soul. When the without of man's nature subjugates the within,
dark storm clouds begin to form in the world.
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Activist: RALPH BUNCHE
1950 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
1st african american to win
On this date in 1950, Ralph Bunche received the Nobel Prize. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace
for his successful mediation of a series of armistice agreements between the (then) new nation of Israel
and four Arab neighbors, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon and Syria.
Ralph Bunche:
I am not unaware, of course, of the special and broad significance of this award - far
transcending its importance or significance to me as an individual - in an imperfect and restive
World in which inequalities among peoples, racial and religious bigotries, prejudices and taboos
are endemic and stubbornly persistent. From this northern land has come a vibrant note of hope
and inspiration for vast millions of people whose bitter experience has impressed upon them that
color and inequality are inexorably concomitant.
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