Freedom Award

The International Rescue Committee (IRC) bestows its Freedom Award for extraordinary contributions to the cause of refugees and human freedom. According to the IRC, "The Freedom Award reveals the remarkable ability of an individual to shape history and change for the better a world moving toward freedom for all."[1]

Freedom Award
Awarded for"extraordinary contributions to the cause of refugees and human freedom"[1]
CountryUnited States
Presented byInternational Rescue Committee
First awarded1957
Last awarded2013
WebsiteIRC Freedom Award

The IRC was founded in 1933 at the request of Albert Einstein,[2] and made its first Freedom Award in 1957, to German politician Willy Brandt, who went on to win the Nobel Peace Prize.[3] The following year, the award was presented to Winston Churchill, British prime minister during the Second World War, for his "dedicated and devoted service to the cause of human liberty".[4] The first joint recipients of the award were Lane Kirkland and his wife Irena who won the prize in 1981.[5] Lane was honored for his "long devotion to the cause of refugees" while Irena was described as "very much a human rights activist".[5] Chinese dissidents Li Shuxian and Fang Lizhi were jointly honored in 1991;[1][6] two American Presidents, George H. W. Bush and Bill Clinton took the prize as a pair in 2005, and film actress Angelina Jolie and United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees High Commissioner António Guterres received the award together in 2007.[7]

Since the first award presentation in 1957, the IRC has made it to 46 recipients, 24 of which were American; the majority of awards have been to politicians. The 1995 presentation was made in absentia to Burmese pro-democracy campaigner and leader of the opposition National League for Democracy (NLD) party, Aung San Suu Kyi.[8][9] The 2011 award ceremony was held in New York City, at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in November, where the presentation was made to the Brokaw family.[10] In 2012, John C. Whitehead received the prize for a second time, the only person to do so.[1]

Recipients

YearImageRecipientNationalityReferences
1957 Willy Brandt  German[5]
1958 Winston Churchill  British[4]
1959 William Joseph Donovan  American[1]
1960 Richard Evelyn Byrd  American[1]
1965 George Meany  American[11]
1966 David Dubinsky  American[1]
1967 David Sarnoff  American[12]
1969 Lucius D. Clay  American[1]
1970 Jacob K. Javits  American[12]
1975 Bruno Kreisky  Austrian[13]
1976Leo Cherne  American[1]
1977 Hubert Humphrey  American[11]
1978Joseph Buttinger  Austrian[1]
1979Mary Pillsbury Lord[A]  American[1]
1981 Lane Kirkland
Irena Kirkland
 American
 American
[5]
1987 Elie Wiesel  Romanian[11]
1987John C. Whitehead  American[14]
1989 Prince Sadruddin Aga Khan  French
 Iranian
  Swiss
[1]
1989 Lech Wałęsa  Polish[11]
1990Violeta Chamorro  Nicaraguan[1]
1991Fang Lizhi
Li Shuxian
 Chinese
 Chinese
[1]
1991 Javier Pérez de Cuéllar  Peruvian[15]
1992 Cyrus Vance  American[12]
1993 George Soros[B]  Hungarian[7]
1993Dwayne Andreas[C]  American[1]
1994Theodore J. Forstmann[B]  American[16]
1994Felix Rohatyn[C]  Austrian[16]
1995 Aung San Suu Kyi[D]  Burmese[9]
1995 Sadako Ogata  Japanese[9]
1995 Richard Holbrooke  American[1]
1997Robert P. De Vecchi  American[12]
1999 Madeleine Albright  American[12]
2001 John McCain  American[17]
2002Reynold Levy  American[18]
2002 Hamid Karzai  Afghan[19]
2003 Václav Havel  Czech[9]
2004 Roméo Dallaire[B]  Canadian[20]
2005
George H.W. Bush
Bill Clinton
 American
 American
[21]
2006 Ellen Johnson Sirleaf  Liberian[22]
2007
António Guterres
Angelina Jolie
 Portuguese
 American
[9]
2008 Kofi Annan  Ghanaian[23]
2011 Brokaw family  American[10]
2012John C. Whitehead  American[24]
2013 George Soros[B]  Hungarian[7][25]
2014The humanitarian aid worker[26]
2015Shimon Peres  Israeli
2016Spyros Galinos  Greek[27]
2017 Leopoldo López  Venezuelan[28][29]

Notes

  • A ^ Lord's award was made posthumously.[1]
  • B ^ Distinguished Humanitarian Award[1]
  • C ^ Distinguished Public Service Award[1]
  • D ^ Special Freedom Award Recipient, in absentia[1]

References