{"id":22402,"date":"2019-11-11T12:43:00","date_gmt":"2019-11-11T19:43:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/moneyppl.com\/?p=22402"},"modified":"2022-04-10T23:28:58","modified_gmt":"2022-04-11T06:28:58","slug":"ranking-the-top-30-nobel-peace-prize-winners","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/dev.moneyppl.com\/ranking-the-top-30-nobel-peace-prize-winners\/22402\/","title":{"rendered":"Ranking The World’s Top 30 Nobel Peace Prize Winners"},"content":{"rendered":"
Here at Self-Made, we talk a lot about people who have become financially successful by working hard to build a business or a lasting career. But there is so much more to life than making money. How we treat one another as human beings holds just as much- if not more – value than monetary success.<\/p>\n
Since 1895, The Nobel Peace Prize has been given to people who made a major impact on humanity. These 30 people have had a lasting legacy years after they are gone. They will continue to be admired for their lifelong efforts for peace as a result.<\/p>\n One of the most famous Nobel Prize recipients is <\/span>Mother Teresa. You may also know her as Saint Teresa if you happen to belong to the Roman Catholic Church. She <\/span>created Missionaries of Charity<\/span><\/a>, which is a sisterhood of other nuns. They are devoted to aiding those who need the most help in Calcutta, India. <\/span><\/p>\n Teresa and her sisters built homes for orphans, hospitals for lepers, and the terminally ill. The story of her kindness and generosity spread around the world, and she inspired other people to love and care for one another. In 1979, she was given the award, and by 2013 she was officially canonized as a saint due to her timeless body of work. <\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Only eight <\/span>months after he became President of the United States, Barack Obama was awarded the Nobel Prize. This was due to his efforts to garner peace with the Muslim world. After becoming President, he immediately set out to pull troops out of Iraq. The motivation for his receipt of the Nobel Peace Prize was because of his “extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples.”<\/span><\/p>\n In addition to his peaceful negotiations, he also advocated for a nuclear-free world. Even before he became President, and in the time since he left the office, Obama has still been pushing for peace. During a speech, he once said, “Now is the time for all of us to take our share of responsibility for a global response to global challenges.”<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n At just 17 years old, Malala Yousafzai became the youngest recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize. She grew up in Pakistan, where her father instilled a love of education in her from an early age. When the Taliban instilled sharia law in Pakistan, women were therefore no longer allowed to work or go to school. <\/span><\/p>\n As a teenager, Malala started writing a blog for BBC Urdu writing about what life is like under Taliban occupation, and advocating for a girl’s right to receive an education. On her way to school, a group of terrorists stopped her bus because they were looking for her. The asked for her by name and shot her in the face. She miraculously survived. After she was released from the hospital, her face was permanently disfigured due to the attack, but this was not enough to stop her. Malala continues to fight for female rights to an education.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n One of the most famous Nobel Prize recipients is <\/span>Tenzin Gyatso,<\/span> the 14th Dalai Lama. He was a Buddhist advocate for peace and freedom <\/span>who was forced to flee and live as a refugee in India after China occupied Tibet. He <\/span>opposed China’s occupation of Tibet and advocated for peace between the two countries. The Dalai Lama created <\/span>a plan for how Tibet could be restored. He recommended that a demilitarized zone should exist between China and Tibet due to the conflict. Once that was in place, the two could settle negotiations between one another. Unfortunately, that plan was rejected because of the deep-seated animosity of the situation.<\/span><\/p>\n Even though his plans were rejected, nearly everyone agreed with his mission for seeking peace. In 1989, he was given the Nobel Prize because he often said that he felt that he had a sense of “universal responsibility” to bring peace to all of humanity. <\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Baroness Bertha von Suttner will go down in history as being the very first woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize. In the 1870s, Bertha von Suttner became friends with Alfred Nobel, the man who founded the Peace Prize Laureate. She established the Austrian Peace Society in 1891 and wrote several anti-war novels because of her focus on peace. Her most famous book was titled<\/span> Lay Down Your Arms<\/span><\/i>, which was provocative and got her point across straight away. <\/span><\/p>\n Even though most peace conferences were dominated by men, Bertha von Suttner was never afraid to speak for the causes she believed in. She earned the nickname<\/span> “generalissimo of the peace movement”. Many people believe that without von Suttner, Alfred Nobel may have never established the Nobel Peace Prizes in his last will and testament. He once wrote to her, “Inform me, convince me, and then I will do something great for the movement” due to her impact in the field.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n In 1906, American President <\/span>Theodore Roosevelt received the Nobel Peace Prize for negotiating peace in the Russo-Japanese war. He also managed to end a dispute with Mexico through arbitration. Roosevelt was the first politician to be awarded a Peace Prize. This was considered to be a controversial decision because of his stance. Not everyone believed that Roosevelt truly deserved to be an icon of world peace. <\/span><\/p>\n Norwegians claimed that Roosevelt was actually a “military mad imperialist” because of the American takeover in the Philippines. Journalists in Sweden even wrote that Alfred Nobel was “turning in his grave” due to Roosevelt’s award in the field. During World War I, he attempted to serve in the US Army as an officer, but he was turned away. In 1919, he did not want the United States to join the League of Nations. So even to this day, there may be some debate as to whether he really represents peace or not due to those facts.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Nearly everyone is familiar with the Red Cross for their humanitarian efforts during wartime and after natural disasters. They are considered to be so amazing that they actually won the Nobel Peace Prize more than once because of their efforts. The Red Cross was mentioned in 1917, 1944, and 1963, as well as being apart of Henri Dumont’s award in 1901.<\/span><\/p>\n During World War I, they were the only ones to receive the award because they “undertook the tremendous task of trying to protect the rights of the many prisoners of war on all sides, including their right to establish contacts with their families.” They received the award again in 1944 due to their work during World War II. Even today, the Red Cross continues to help people around the world.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n After the end of World War I, many people were desperate to make sure that nothing like this ever happened again. So American President Woodrow Wilson established The League of Nations as part of his “14 point plan.” This was meant to ensure world peace, and therefore garner negotiations in Europe. After World War I, the peace negotiations between Great Britain, France, and Germany were established. Germany had to take all of the blame for starting the war, and this led to their economic downfall as a result.<\/span><\/p>\n Wilson was disappointed with how it turned out. He believed that the punishments given to Germany were too harsh, and would therefore result in more conflict later on. This was correct, and it would eventually be one of the major causes of World War II. Since Wilson openly disagreed with the terms of this treaty, the United States was denied from entering the League of Nations even though Wilson was the one who orchestrated it. Many other Nobel Laureates had dreamed of creating a League of Nations for years. He became a natural choice to win the award in 1919 as a result.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Nearly everyone knows the story of Martin Luther King Jr., who spent his life advocating for civil rights. Since 1955, he orchestrated multiple nonviolent protests against racism in the United States. He also became the leader of the <\/span>Southern Christian Leadership Conference.<\/span> His most famous speech was his 1963 classic, “I Have a Dream”, which was given in front of a crowd of 250,000 in front of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington DC. Because of this demonstration, President Johnson created a law that prohibited racial discrimination. The next year in 1964, King received the Nobel Peace Prize as a result of his efforts. <\/span><\/p>\n In 1968, King was killed in Memphis, Tennessee. The leader of the FBI, J. Edgar Hoover, had King under surveillance because he suspected him of being a communist. Some believe that his assassination was due to fear that he was gaining too much power. Even though his end was truly tragic, he still has a lasting legacy of a man who committed his life to peace and equality. He’ll go down as arguably the most prominent example of fighting inequality as a result of his life’s work.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Wiesel was a Holocaust survivor who spent years of his life living in the Auschwitz concentration camp. His entire family was killed by the Nazis and he witnessed some of the worst moments in human history. When he was set free, Wiesel was just 17 years old. He wrote several books about the experience, including one called <\/span>Night<\/span><\/i>, which has since become required reading in schools across America. After the war, he moved to New York City and became an American citizen. <\/span><\/p>\n Wiesel became the Chairman of “The President’s Commission on the Holocaust” due to his experiences. He spent the rest of his life educating people. One of the biggest goals he had was to make people truly care about their fellow human beings so that this kind of tragedy will never happen again. He was once quoted saying, <\/span>“The opposite of love is not hate, but indifference.” Wiesel<\/span> became the winner of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1986.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Mandela was a political activist who opposed apartheid in South Africa. Apartheid was racial segregation in South Africa that kept white and black people separated from one another. Black people were forced to live in horrible conditions. Mandela spoke up against the system that was designed to oppress his people. He encouraged a “mass formation of the democratic movement” due to apartheid’s horrors. In 1962, he was captured and charged with conspiring against the South African government. Mandela was given a life sentence in prison as a result.<\/span><\/p>\n Even though he was behind bars for decades, Mandela continued to fight apartheid. He also led demonstrations against the poor treatment of prisoners. People began protesting for Nelson Mandela to be freed. In 1990, President Frederik de Klerk released Mandela from prison. Once he was released, they both sat down to negotiate the end of apartheid as a result. This was considered to be such a huge success for civil rights that they were both given the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993. After this, Mandela was so loved by everyone that he was elected as the first black President of South Africa from 1994 to 1999 as a result of his life’s work.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n North and South Korea have been divided by war since 1950. Even today, the two nations are separated by their Demilitarized Zone. In 1998, <\/span>South Korea’s President Kim Dae-jung created the “sunshine policy” towards North Korea. This was named after Aesop’s Fable called “<\/span>The<\/b> North Wind and <\/span>the<\/b> Sun<\/span>“. In the story, the wind and sun have an argument over who is stronger. Kim Dae-jung insisted that they must be friendly to one another if they want to have any sort of peace and reconciliation as a result.<\/span><\/p>\n Aside from diplomacy with North Korea, Kim Dae-jung also had to struggle for democracy and human rights in South Korea. He always made sure that the North would be able to receive humanitarian aid, even if their political views differed so drastically. In 2000, Kim Dae-jung arranged for a meeting with Kim Jung Il. They finally came to an agreement that family members who had been separated by the border could see one another for the first time in years. Dae-jung was awarded the prize in the year 2000 because of his efforts to find peace.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Carter was the 39th president of the United States, serving from 1977 to 1981. In 1978, he helped to broker a peace agreement between Egypt and Israel. He continued to get involved in foreign policy. Even after losing his re-election against Ronald Reagan, Carter continued to have <\/span>active peace campaigns. He was not afraid to advocate for solutions that were not official US policy if it meant bringing peace between the two countries.<\/span><\/p>\n Carter won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2002 due to “decades of untiring effort to find peaceful solutions to international conflicts, to advance democracy and human rights, and to promote economic and social development.”<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Al Gore was the Vice President. In 1992, he began to advocate for environmental reforms because of the world’s many issues in that area. After losing his run for Presidency in 2000, he decided to devote his entire career to the cause. He began working together with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which had been around since 1988. In 2007, both Al Gore and the IPCC won the Nobel Peace Prize because of “their efforts to build up and disseminate greater knowledge about man-made climate change, and to lay the foundations for the measures that are needed to counteract such change.”<\/span><\/p>\n He wrote a book called Earth in the Balance: Forging a New Common Purpose<\/em>. Gore also helped to produce a documentary called An Inconvenient Truth<\/em> in 2006. According to the Nobel Committee, Gore is the one individual who has made the biggest impact in pushing the government to take action for climate challenge thanks to his continued efforts. <\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Since World War I, chemical warfare has been used on the battlefield. For years after, chemical weapons devastated civilian populations during war. They were also abused by terrorist groups. The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) was formed in 1997.<\/span><\/p>\n They work to make sure that the ban on the manufacturing and storage of chemical weapons is a rule being followed throughout the world. The OPCW won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2013 due to their efforts in this field.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n In 2011, these three Liberian women were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize “for their non-violent struggle for the safety of women and for women’s rights to full participation in peace-building work.” Ellen Johnson Sirleaf was born in Liberia. She moved to the United States to receive her education at Harvard University. She served as Liberia’s Minister of Finance and was President of Liberia from 2005 to 2011. During her time as President, she pushed for more peace and economic development in the country.<\/span><\/p>\n Gbowee is a social worker who specializes in giving therapy to women who have experienced trauma during the Liberian Civil War, especially child soldiers. She also became the head of the Women Peace and Security Network Africa. Unlike the other two winners that year, Tawakkol Karman is from Yemen. In 2005, she co-founded the group Women Journalists Without Chains. They promote freedom of speech and democracy. She is therefore active in protests that fight for human rights.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Liu Xiaobo studied literature and philosophy.. He became a professor in Beijing. In 1988, he earned a doctorate degree and became a guest lecturer at universities in the United States and Europe. In 1989, Xiaobo stood by his student during the protests in Tiananmen Square. He was arrested for disagreeing with China’s one-party system as a result. After two years in prison and three years in a labor camp, he was finally released. He spent the rest of his life fighting for democracy in China. Article 35 of the Chinese Constitution says that citizens should be able to enjoy “freedom of speech, of the press, of assembly, of association, of procession, and of demonstration”.<\/span><\/p>\n So he continued to fight against the government and demanded human rights. Xiaobo co-wrote a book called Charta 08. The book laid out a plan on how to bring democracy to the country. He was arrested again in 2008. Xiaobo was sentenced to 11 years in prison due to his efforts. Even though he was in prison, he still won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2010. He has been called “China’s Nelson Mandela.” Sadly, he passed away in 2017. <\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Wangari Muta Maathai became the first African woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize in 2004. She was also the first woman in East and Central to receive a doctorate in Biology. Maathai created an environmental program called the Green Belt Movement in her home country of Kenya. Instead of trying to go after big government, her strategy was to start with grassroots campaigns. It worked due to her constant efforts. <\/span><\/p>\n It became a “trickle-up” movement because of her. Once neighbors and farmers saw how great it was to plant trees, more wanted to participate. This led to the planting of over 30 million new trees in multiple African countries. Many of the areas that were once barren wastelands are now lush and green once again. During an interview, <\/span>Maathai said<\/span><\/a>, “The environment is not an issue for tomorrow. It is every day. It is the air we breathe, it’s the water we drink, the food we eat. And we can’t live without these things.”<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n The European Union was founded in 1952 in order to garner peace and conflict resolution among nations. One of their early tasks was to fix the relationship between Germany and France after World War II. They helped to rebuild that relationship by building the European Coal and Steel Community together with four other countries. As time went on, more and more countries felt comfortable envisioning them as a unified Europe.<\/span><\/p>\n After years of hard work, there are now 28 countries in the EU. If not for them, there’s no telling just how many conflicts were resolved early. In 2012, the European Union was celebrated their 60-year anniversary. It was appropriate for them to become the winner of the Nobel Peace Prize that year. <\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n In 2007, The International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) was founded in Australia. They work to <\/span>educate people on the horrific consequences of nuclear weapons. From a humanitarian point of view, they want to push for treaties that will resolve nuclear conflicts. The efforts are in the hope nothing like Hiroshima and Nagasaki could ever happen to humanity again. <\/span><\/p>\n1. Mother Teresa<\/span><\/h2>\n
2. Barack Obama<\/span><\/h2>\n
3. Malala Yousafzai <\/span><\/h2>\n
4. Tenzin Gyatso, the 14th Dalai Lama<\/span><\/h2>\n
5. Bertha von Suttner<\/span><\/h2>\n
6. Theodore Roosevelt<\/span><\/h2>\n
7. International Committee Of The Red Cross<\/span><\/h2>\n
8. Woodrow Wilson<\/span><\/h2>\n
9. Martin Luther King, Jr.<\/span><\/h2>\n
10. Elie Wiesel<\/span><\/h2>\n
11. Nelson Mandela & Frederik Willem de Klerk<\/span><\/h2>\n
12. Kim Dae-jung<\/span><\/h2>\n
13. Jimmy Carter<\/span><\/h2>\n
14. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and Albert Arnold (Al) Gore Jr.<\/span><\/h2>\n
15. Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW)<\/span><\/h2>\n
16. Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Leymah Gbowee, and Tawakkol Karman<\/span><\/h2>\n
17. Liu Xiaobo<\/span><\/h2>\n
18. Wangari Muta Maathai<\/span><\/h2>\n
19. The European Union<\/span><\/h2>\n
20. International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN)<\/span><\/h2>\n