Nobel Peace Prize winners Malala Yousafzai and Kailash Satyarthi hold up
their Nobel medals during the award ceremony in Oslo on Wednesday.
Kailash Satyarthi of India and
Malala Yousafzai from Pakistan on Wednesday received the Nobel Peace Prize for
2014 for their pioneering work on promoting child rights in the subcontinent,
as they made an impassioned plea to globalise compassion.
“Satyarthi and Yousafzai are
precisely the people whom Alfred Nobel in his will calls ‘champions of peace’,”
chairman of the Norwegian Nobel Committee Thorbjorn Jagland said in his speech
before awarding them the prestigious prize in Oslo.
“A young girl and a somewhat older
man, one from Pakistan and one from India, one Muslim, the other Hindu; both
symbols of what the world needs: more unity. Fraternity between the nations!,”
he added.
Mr. Satyarthi, who gave up his job
as an electrical engineer to run an NGO for rescuing children from forced
labour and trafficking, said: “I refuse to accept that the world is so poor,
when just one week of global military expenditure is enough to bring all of our
children into classrooms.”
“I refuse to accept that the
shackles of slavery can ever be... stronger than the quest for freedom,” said
60-year-old Mr. Satyarthi, who asked the audience to feel the child inside them
and globalise compassion.
The audience included King Harald V
of Norway and Pakistan’s former Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani.
“Let us inculcate and transform the
individuals’ compassion into a global movement. Let us globalise compassion.
Not passive compassion, but transformative compassion that leads to justice,
equality, and freedom,” Mr. Satyarthi said after receiving the award in Oslo at
the ornate Oslo City Hall.
Invoking Mahatma Gandhi, he said,
“If we are to teach real peace in this world... we shall have to begin with the
children.” ‘I humbly add, let us unite the world through the compassion for our
children.’
“I represent here the sound of
silence. The cry of innocence. And, the face of invisibility. I have come here
to share the voices and dreams of our children, our children, because they are
all our children,” he said, adding that the crime against children has no place
in a civilised society.
Mr. Satyarthi’s NGO Bachpan Bachao
Andolan (Save Childhood Movement) prides itself on liberating over 80,000
children from bonded labour in factories and workshops across India.
According to the International
Labour Organisation (ILO) there are about 168 million child labourers globally.
There are roughly 60 million child labourers in India alone.
Mr. Satyarthi and 17-year-old
Malala, who survived a near-fatal Taliban attack two years ago with
determination advocating education for girls, were named by the Nobel Peace
Prize Committee for the prestigious award on October 10.
They received the Nobel medal which
is 18 carat green gold plated with 24 carat gold and weighs around 175g.
They will share $1.1 million prize
money.
(Courtesy: The Hindu)
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