Shirin
Ebadi's Nobel Prize Speech
The Nobel Peace Prize 2003 - Shirin Ebadi, Iran
Presentation Speech by Professor Ole Danbolt Mjøs, Chairman
of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, Oslo, December 10, 2003
Your Majesty, Your Royal Highnesses, Peace Prize
Laureate, Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen, "The Norwegian
Nobel Committee has decided to award the Nobel Peace Prize for
2003 to Shirin Ebadi for her efforts for democracy and human rights.
She has focused especially on the campaign for the rights of women
and children." This was the first sentence of the Committee's
announcement on 10 October of this year's Peace Prize Laureate.
I believe this announcement has already changed your life, Shirin
Ebadi. Your name will shine in the history of the Peace Prize.
Let us hope that the prize will also inspire changes in your beloved
home country, Iran, as well as in many other parts of the world
where people need to hear your clear voice. And let me hasten
to add - this applies to the western world as well. Fundamental
values, such as liberty, justice and respect for human rights
will - in all places and at all times - need vigilant and critical
champions. The great Persian poet, Rumi or Mowlavi as Iranians
like to call him, lived in the 13th century. Somewhere in his
great work "Mathnawi", there is a short poem about a
miserable wretch who came under attack by a ferocious dragon.
A heroic rescuer rushed in at the last moment, and Rumi's comment
is: "There are such helpers in the world, who rush to save
anyone who cries out. Like Mercy itself, they run towards the
screaming. And they can't be bought off.
If you were to ask one of those, "Why did you come so quickly?"
he or she would say, "Because I heard your helplessness."
Another of the great Persian poets, Saadi of Shiraz, who also
lived in the 13th century, says in the well-known work "The
Rose Garden" - Golistan - that he who is indifferent to the
suffering of others is a traitor to that which is truly human.
Dear Shirin Ebadi, You and the Iranian people represent the tradition
of Saadi and Rumi. You are both guide and bridge-builder. You
strive to bring people together across cultures, races and religions!
That is your hallmark! The Norwegian poet, Arne Paasche Aasen,
wrote in 1939 the lovely poem "Your youth" - about being
young in spirit - where he says: "Now cries the world: We
need your heart, your gifts, your flaming spirit!
And were you to be given youth to have and keep Then use it -
use all your energy and powers" Dear Shirin Ebadi, You are
young in spirit. You possess great gifts. You have a warm heart.
You are brave. We admire your efforts. The world needs you! Congratulations
with the 2003 Nobel Peace Prize! The Norwegian Nobel Committee
is convinced that the Peace Prize has been awarded to the right
person, at the right time and in the right place. When the director
of the Nobel Institute telephoned Shirin Ebadi's home in Teheran
to tell her the good news, her husband answered that his wife
was in Paris and would not be easy to get hold of - she had forgotten
her mobile telephone at home. Nevertheless, the news that you
had been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize reached you very quickly
in Paris, and the entire conference broke out in enthusiastic
jubilation. Later, we learned that you were not even aware that
you had been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. But then, reactions
started pouring in. Not everyone knew your name, but the world
understood immediately what the Committee meant: All people are
entitled to fundamental rights, and at a time when Islam is being
demonized in many quarters of the western world, it was the Norwegian
Nobel Committee's wish to underline how important and how valuable
it is to foster dialogue between peoples and between civilizations.
This is a wish that most people share and that is why the reactions
to this year's award have been so positive, even though we understand
if you had perhaps hoped for a few more congratulations from the
authorities of your own home country and region. And now, of course,
you have suddenly become quite a world celebrity! Today you are
here, Shirin Ebadi, in Oslo City Hall to receive the Nobel Peace
Prize for 2003. And we rejoice together with you, your closest
family and friends, many of whom are present here today. It is
indeed a great pleasure for the Norwegian Nobel Committee to award
- for the first time in history - the Nobel Peace Prize to a woman
from the Muslim world - a woman that the world can be proud of,
as can all other champions of human rights around the world. It
is our sincere hope that the people of Iran will feel joy that
a citizen of their country - for the first time in history - receives
the Nobel Peace Prize. And we hope that the prize will serve as
inspiration for all those who are campaigning for human rights
and democracy in your country, in the Muslim world and in all
countries in the East and West - everywhere where human rights
work needs inspiration and support. Shirin Ebadi has been awarded
the Nobel Peace Prize for her efforts for democracy and human
rights and, in particular, for her fight for the rights of women
and children. She has been very clear in her opposition to patriarchal
cultures that deny equal rights to women, who represent half of
the population. But mothers must also be aware of their responsibilities.
They are the ones who bring up young boys to be men and who raise
daughters to become strong women. Shirin Ebadi is the founder
and leader of the Association for Support of Children's Rights
in Iran, which has some 5000 members. The centre is located in
Teheran and it produces information material for use in schools
and operates an emergency hot line for children. The Nobel Committee
hopes that the Nobel Peace Prize award to Shirin Ebadi will contribute
to an increased focus on the rights of children the world over.
In an interview Shirin Ebadi was asked: "Do you have a message
to send to Muslim women?" "Yes", she answered,
"Keep on fighting". "Don't believe that you are
meant to occupy a lower position in society. Get yourself an education!
Do your best and compete in all areas of life. God created us
all as equals. By fighting for equal status, we are doing what
God wants us to do", argues Shirin Ebadi. In this respect,
it is worth noting that some 60 percent of the students at the
University of Teheran are, in fact, women. At the same time, we
must not forget women's legitimate claim for equality before the
law. In law and order, we must all be equal, and women must enjoy
exactly the same rights as men. On this issue, Shirin Ebadi stands
in the front ranks and we can but admire her for her efforts.
Many are those who have drawn benefit from Shirin Ebadi's commitment
and capacity for work. She has pleaded the cause of refugees in
a region where they are in such great numbers and so desperately
need help. Furthermore, she has called attention to the rights
of all citizens - also their right to freedom of expression -
irrespective of religion, ethnic origin or political opinion.
As a lawyer, judge, lecturer, author and activist, her voice has
sounded clearly and powerfully in her native country Iran, and
also far beyond its national borders. She has come forward with
professional force and unflagging courage, and she has defied
any danger to her own safety. She is truly a woman of the people!
The campaign for fundamental human rights is her most important
arena and no society can be called civilized if the rights of
women and children fail to be respected. At a time of violence,
she has staunchly upheld the principle of non-violence. For her,
it is fundamental that the supreme political power of a society
is founded on democratic elections. She emphasizes that information
and dialogue constitute the best avenue toward a change of attitudes
and a settling of conflicts. After years of reflection, she has
come to the conclusion that revolution never leads to the changes
promised by the revolutionaries. The road forward must move in
the direction of non-violence and dialogue, law and order. Again
and again, this year's Laureate has stressed that she is an Iranian.
"I am proud to be an Iranian. I shall live in Iran for as
long as I possibly can," she says. For Shirin Ebadi, this
has meant a life in fear, but she has learned to live with her
fear and she is optimistic about the future. People insist on
ruling themselves. The time when ruling powers could threaten
their way to dominion is gone forever. Rulers "will realize
that the time for governing through fear is drawing to a close
the world over. Why should Iran be an exception?" she says.
The 110 persons and organizations that have been awarded the Nobel
Peace Prize over the years are extremely diverse. But the majority
of them have one thing in common - they are optimists, unshakable
optimists. It is their optimism that gives them the inspiration
they need in their struggles. Furthermore, many of the laureates
are filled with a courage that we can scarcely understand. Even
under the most challenging of circumstances, they keep going -
day after day, year after year. Shirin Ebadi has run great risks.
As a lawyer, she brings cases to court that few others would venture
to get involved in. Her ideas are spreading in ever-widening circles,
and, to quote the Norwegian poet Paasche Aasen: You must be true
to your own youth, "so that the field you plough can grow
when your work is done." There are several long lines running
through the 102 years of Nobel Peace Prize history. In the last
few decades, the most distinct of these has perhaps been the increasing
emphasis that the Norwegian Nobel Committee has placed on democracy
and human rights. Who was the first to receive the Peace Prize
according to this tradition is open for debate. Was it the prize
awarded to Woodrow Wilson in 1919 or to Carl von Ossietzky in
1935, or even the 1951 prize to the French union leader, Léon
Jouhaux? Although human rights represent one dimension of all
these three awards, there were also other dimensions involved.
Hence, the first indisputable human rights prize was perhaps,
after all, the one awarded to Albert Lutuli of South Africa in
1960. In the more than four decades since, many such prizes have
followed. Some names shine brighter than others: Martin Luther
King (1964), Andrei Sakharov (1975), Amnesty International (1977),
Lech Walesa (1983), Desmond Tutu (1984), Aung San Suu Kyi (1991)
- and she is especially in our thoughts today - Rigoberta Menchú
(1992) and Nelson Mandela (1993) and then this year, Shirin Ebadi.
It is against this backdrop that we can more easily understand
what this year's Laureate has achieved and what the consequences
of such a prize can be, when it works at its best. The idea of
human rights and democracy is gaining ground - albeit slowly.
Practising human rights is always a challenge; high demands will
always be placed on those who wish to live up to their ideals.
It is with great satisfaction that we see that the idea of people's
right to govern themselves through free elections is gradually
prevailing in many parts of the world. By comparison to only 10-15
years ago, all of eastern Europe, Russia and several other countries
of the former Soviet Union, many states in eastern Asia and not
least in Latin America, as well as a few in Africa have now adopted
democratic forms of government. Perhaps the Norwegian Nobel Committee
is able to stimulate a development that still has mainly local
roots and explanations. Every nation must fight its own battle.
But we who stand on the outside looking in can express our sympathy
and make our contribution. Shirin Ebadi is a conscious Muslim.
She sees no conflict between Islam and fundamental human rights.
Islam is a diverse religion. How the message of justice is to
be realized in practice and how human integrity is to be preserved
is an essential issue for Muslims of today. We shall listen to
all positive, novel interpretations, all proposals of reform.
Here too, women have an important role to play; no longer is it
for elderly men to interpret the message, argue many Muslim women.
"Those who kill in the name of Islam, they violate Islam",
says Shirin Ebadi. We know that human rights are being violated
not only in Muslim countries. It happens whether regimes our religious
or secular, nationalistic or Marxist. For Shirin Ebadi, therefore,
it is not religion that is the deepest root cause of the problem.
But, no matter what, state and religion should be separate, is
her view, since the political arena should be open to so many
diverse interests and views. Shirin Ebadi underlines that the
dialogue between different cultures in the world must be founded
on the values they have in common. There need be no fundamental
conflict between Islam and Christianity. That is why she was pleased
that the Pope was among the first to congratulate her on the Peace
Prize. It is possible that the Peace Prize may, in the short-term,
have led to more hostilities than peace in the homeland of some
Peace Prize laureates. But the Nobel Committee's acknowledgement
of democracy and human rights rests on the belief that repression
cannot persist in the long run. In the last few decades in particular,
we have seen how large parts of the world have abruptly thrown
off the yoke of dictatorship. Repression leads to conflict. Most
people will simply not put up with the "peace of the graveyard",
and one of the most certain findings of modern political science
is precisely that democracies do not go to war against each other.
I appeal to all individuals, all peoples and to all nations of
the world: Let us work together for a better world.
Let build peace and prevent war.
Let us make the world a better place to live in for young and
for old.
Let us focus on human integrity and human rights.
Let us fight against poverty and disease in the world.
Let justice, respect and cooperation prevail among peoples and
nations of the world.
Let us TOGETHER realize the dream of world peace. As the university
man that I am, I challenge all universities the world over to
be even more distinct in underscoring the world's need for peace,
democracy and social and economic justice. Dear Peace Prize Laureate
Shirin Ebadi, We admire your efforts for human rights in general
and your struggle for the rights of women and children in particular.
We admire your work for peace without resorting to violence.
We admire your work for dialogue between religions of the world.
We hope that the Nobel Peace Prize may contribute to the realization
of your dream. Allow me finally to revert to the great poet Rumi
who wanted to expose everything that prevents us from seeing the
world as it is - and who also tells us that the vision or dream
leads to clear-sightedness. In a poem, whose Norwegian title is
"Draumen som må tolkast" - The dream that must
be interpreted, Rumi says: "and although we seem to sleep,
there is an inner vigilant voice that steers the dream, that will
finally awake us to the truth about who we are." The great
Norwegian poet Olav H. Hauge also had a dream. He has written
the beautiful poem "It's the Dream", that I would like
to conclude with: "It's the dream we carry in secret
that something miraculous will happen
that must happen
that time will open
that the heart will open
that doors will open
that mountains will open
that springs will gush -
that the dream will open
that one morning we will glide into
some harbour we didn't know was there." Congratulations,
Shirin Ebadi, and all the best of luck in your future endeavours!
Shirin Ebadi - Nobel Lecture
Nobel Lecture, Oslo, December 10, 2003
In the name of the God of Creation and Wisdom
Your Majesty, Your Royal Highnesses, Honourable Members of the
Norwegian Nobel Committee, Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen,
I feel extremely honoured that today my voice is reaching the
people of the world from this distinguished venue. This great
honour has been bestowed upon me by the Norwegian Nobel Committee.
I salute the spirit of Alfred Nobel and hail all true followers
of his path. This year, the Nobel Peace Prize has been awarded
to a woman from Iran, a Muslim country in the Middle East. Undoubtedly,
my selection will be an inspiration to the masses of women who
are striving to realize their rights, not only in Iran but throughout
the region - rights taken away from them through the passage of
history. This selection will make women in Iran, and much further
afield, believe in themselves. Women constitute half of the population
of every country. To disregard women and bar them from active
participation in political, social, economic and cultural life
would in fact be tantamount to depriving the entire population
of every society of half its capability. The patriarchal culture
and the discrimination against women, particularly in the Islamic
countries, cannot continue for ever. Honourable members of the
Norwegian Nobel Committee! As you are aware, the honour and blessing
of this prize will have a positive and far-reaching impact on
the humanitarian and genuine endeavours of the people of Iran
and the region. The magnitude of this blessing will embrace every
freedom-loving and peace-seeking individual, whether they are
women or men. I thank the Norwegian Nobel Committee for this honour
that has been bestowed upon me and for the blessing of this honour
for the peace-loving people of my country. Today coincides with
the 55th anniversary of the adoption of the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights; a declaration which begins with the recognition
of the inherent dignity and the equal and inalienable rights of
all members of the human family, as the guarantor of freedom,
justice and peace. And it promises a world in which human beings
shall enjoy freedom of expression and opinion, and be safeguarded
and protected against fear and poverty. Unfortunately, however,
this year's report by the United Nations Development Programme
(UNDP), as in the previous years, spells out the rise of a disaster
which distances mankind from the idealistic world of the authors
of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. In 2002, almost
1.2 billion human beings lived in glaring poverty, earning less
than one dollar a day. Over 50 countries were caught up in war
or natural disasters. AIDS has so far claimed the lives of 22
million individuals, and turned 13 million children into orphans.
At the same time, in the past two years, some states have violated
the universal principles and laws of human rights by using the
events of 11 September and the war on international terrorism
as a pretext. The United Nations General Assembly Resolution 57/219,
of 18 December 2002, the United Nations Security Council Resolution
1456, of 20 January 2003, and the United Nations Commission on
Human Rights Resolution 2003/68, of 25 April 2003, set out and
underline that all states must ensure that any measures taken
to combat terrorism must comply with all their obligations under
international law, in particular international human rights and
humanitarian law. However, regulations restricting human rights
and basic freedoms, special bodies and extraordinary courts, which
make fair adjudication difficult and at times impossible, have
been justified and given legitimacy under the cloak of the war
on terrorism. The concerns of human rights' advocates increase
when they observe that international human rights laws are breached
not only by their recognized opponents under the pretext of cultural
relativity, but that these principles are also violated in Western
democracies, in other words countries which were themselves among
the initial codifiers of the United Nations Charter and the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights. It is in this framework that, for
months, hundreds of individuals who were arrested in the course
of military conflicts have been imprisoned in Guantanamo, without
the benefit of the rights stipulated under the international Geneva
conventions, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the
[United Nations] International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights. Moreover, a question which millions of citizens in the
international civil society have been asking themselves for the
past few years, particularly in recent months, and continue to
ask, is this: why is it that some decisions and resolutions of
the UN Security Council are binding, while some other resolutions
of the council have no binding force? Why is it that in the past
35 years, dozens of UN resolutions concerning the occupation of
the Palestinian territories by the state of Israel have not been
implemented promptly, yet, in the past 12 years, the state and
people of Iraq, once on the recommendation of the Security Council,
and the second time, in spite of UN Security Council opposition,
were subjected to attack, military assault, economic sanctions,
and, ultimately, military occupation? Ladies and Gentlemen, Allow
me to say a little about my country, region, culture and faith.
I am an Iranian. A descendent of Cyrus The Great. The very emperor
who proclaimed at the pinnacle of power 2500 years ago that "...
he would not reign over the people if they did not wish it."
And [he] promised not to force any person to change his religion
and faith and guaranteed freedom for all. The Charter of Cyrus
The Great is one of the most important documents that should be
studied in the history of human rights. I am a Muslim. In the
Koran the Prophet of Islam has been cited as saying: "Thou
shalt believe in thine faith and I in my religion". That
same divine book sees the mission of all prophets as that of inviting
all human beings to uphold justice. Since the advent of Islam,
too, Iran's civilization and culture has become imbued and infused
with humanitarianism, respect for the life, belief and faith of
others, propagation of tolerance and compromise and avoidance
of violence, bloodshed and war. The luminaries of Iranian literature,
in particular our Gnostic literature, from Hafiz, Mowlavi [better
known in the West as Rumi] and Attar to Saadi, Sanaei, Naser Khosrow
and Nezami, are emissaries of this humanitarian culture. Their
message manifests itself in this poem by Saadi: "The sons
of Adam are limbs of one another
Having been created of one essence". "When the calamity
of time afflicts one limb
The other limbs cannot remain at rest". The people of Iran
have been battling against consecutive conflicts between tradition
and modernity for over 100 years. By resorting to ancient traditions,
some have tried and are trying to see the world through the eyes
of their predecessors and to deal with the problems and difficulties
of the existing world by virtue of the values of the ancients.
But, many others, while respecting their historical and cultural
past and their religion and faith, seek to go forth in step with
world developments and not lag behind the caravan of civilization,
development and progress. The people of Iran, particularly in
the recent years, have shown that they deem participation in public
affairs to be their right, and that they want to be masters of
their own destiny. This conflict is observed not merely in Iran,
but also in many Muslim states. Some Muslims, under the pretext
that democracy and human rights are not compatible with Islamic
teachings and the traditional structure of Islamic societies,
have justified despotic governments, and continue to do so. In
fact, it is not so easy to rule over a people who are aware of
their rights, using traditional, patriarchal and paternalistic
methods. Islam is a religion whose first sermon to the Prophet
begins with the word "Recite!" The Koran swears by the
pen and what it writes. Such a sermon and message cannot be in
conflict with awareness, knowledge, wisdom, freedom of opinion
and expression and cultural pluralism. The discriminatory plight
of women in Islamic states, too, whether in the sphere of civil
law or in the realm of social, political and cultural justice,
has its roots in the patriarchal and male-dominated culture prevailing
in these societies, not in Islam. This culture does not tolerate
freedom and democracy, just as it does not believe in the equal
rights of men and women, and the liberation of women from male
domination (fathers, husbands, brothers ...), because it would
threaten the historical and traditional position of the rulers
and guardians of that culture. One has to say to those who have
mooted the idea of a clash of civilizations, or prescribed war
and military intervention for this region, and resorted to social,
cultural, economic and political sluggishness of the South in
a bid to justify their actions and opinions, that if you consider
international human rights laws, including the nations' right
to determine their own destinies, to be universal, and if you
believe in the priority and superiority of parliamentary democracy
over other political systems, then you cannot think only of your
own security and comfort, selfishly and contemptuously. A quest
for new means and ideas to enable the countries of the South,
too, to enjoy human rights and democracy, while maintaining their
political independence and territorial integrity of their respective
countries, must be given top priority by the United Nations in
respect of future developments and international relations. The
decision by the Nobel Peace Committee to award the 2003 prize
to me, as the first Iranian and the first woman from a Muslim
country, inspires me and millions of Iranians and nationals of
Islamic states with the hope that our efforts, endeavours and
struggles toward the realization of human rights and the establishment
of democracy in our respective countries enjoy the support, backing
and solidarity of international civil society. This prize belongs
to the people of Iran. It belongs to the people of the Islamic
states, and the people of the South for establishing human rights
and democracy. Ladies and Gentlemen In the introduction to my
speech, I spoke of human rights as a guarantor of freedom, justice
and peace. If human rights fail to be manifested in codified laws
or put into effect by states, then, as rendered in the preamble
of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, human beings will
be left with no choice other than staging a "rebellion against
tyranny and oppression". A human being divested of all dignity,
a human being deprived of human rights, a human being gripped
by starvation, a human being beaten by famine, war and illness,
a humiliated human being and a plundered human being is not in
any position or state to recover the rights he or she has lost.
If the 21st century wishes to free itself from the cycle of violence,
acts of terror and war, and avoid repetition of the experience
of the 20th century - that most disaster-ridden century of humankind,
there is no other way except by understanding and putting into
practice every human right for all mankind, irrespective of race,
gender, faith, nationality or social status. In anticipation of
that day. With much gratitude
Shirin Ebadi
© THE NOBEL FOUNDATION
2003
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