President Obama: "I Look Forward to Recognizing Them with This Award"
WASHINGTON – Today, President Barack Obama named
thirteen recipients of the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
The Medal of Freedom is the Nation’s highest
civilian honor, presented to individuals who have made especially meritorious
contributions to the security or national interests of the United States, to
world peace, or to cultural or other significant public or private
endeavors. The awards will be presented at the White House in late
spring.
“These extraordinary honorees come from
different backgrounds and different walks of life, but each of them has made a
lasting contribution to the life of our Nation. They’ve challenged us,
they’ve inspired us, and they’ve made the world a better place. I look
forward to recognizing them with this award,” said President Obama.
The following individuals will be awarded the
Presidential Medal of Freedom:
Madeleine
Albright
From 1997 to 2001, under President William J.
Clinton, Albright served as the 64th United States Secretary of State, the
first woman to hold that position. During her tenure, she worked to
enlarge NATO and helped lead the Alliance’s campaign against terror and ethnic
cleansing in the Balkans, pursued peace in the Middle East and Africa, sought
to reduce the dangerous spread of nuclear weapons, and was a champion of
democracy, human rights, and good governance across the globe. From 1993
to 1997, she was America’s Permanent Representative to the United
Nations. Since leaving office, she founded the Albright Stonebridge Group
and Albright Capital Management, returned to teaching at Georgetown University,
and authored five books. Albright chairs the National Democratic
Institute and is President of the Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation.
John Doar
Doar was a legendary public servant and leader
of federal efforts to protect and enforce civil rights during the 1960s.
He served as Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Civil Rights Division
of the Department of Justice. In that capacity, he was instrumental
during many major civil rights crises, including singlehandedly preventing a
riot in Jackson, Mississippi, following the funeral of slain civil rights
leader Medgar Evers in 1963. Doar brought notable civil rights cases,
including obtaining convictions for the 1964 killings of three civil rights
workers in Neshoba County, Mississippi, and leading the effort to enforce the
right to vote and implement the Voting Rights Act of 1965. He later
served as Special Counsel to the U.S. House Committee on the Judiciary as it
investigated the Watergate scandal and considered articles of impeachment
against President Nixon. Doar continues to practice law at Doar Rieck
Kaley & Mack in New York.
Bob Dylan
One of the most influential American musicians
of the 20th century, Dylan released his first album in 1962. Known for
his rich and poetic lyrics, his work had considerable influence on the civil
rights movement of the 1960s and has had significant impact on American culture
over the past five decades. He has won 11 Grammys, including a lifetime
achievement award. He was named Commandeur dans l'Ordre des Art et des
Lettres and has received a Pulitzer Prize Special Citation. Dylan
was awarded the 2009 National Medal of Arts. He has written more than 600
songs, and his songs have been recorded more than 3,000 times by other
artists. He continues recording and touring around the world today.
William
Foege
A physician and epidemiologist, Foege helped
lead the successful campaign to eradicate smallpox in the 1970s. He was
appointed Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in 1977
and, with colleagues, founded the Task Force for Child Survival in 1984.
Foege became Executive Director of The Carter Center in 1986 and continues to serve
the organization as a Senior Fellow. He helped shape the global health
work of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and remains a champion of a wide
array of issues, including child survival and development, injury prevention,
and preventative medicine. Foege’s leadership has contributed
significantly to increased awareness and action on global health issues, and
his enthusiasm, energy, and effectiveness in these endeavors have inspired a
generation of leaders in public health.
John Glenn
Glenn is a former United States Marine Corps
pilot, astronaut, and United States Senator. In 1962, he was the third
American in space and the first American to orbit the Earth. After
retiring from the Marine Corps, Glenn was elected to the U.S. Senate in Ohio in
1974. He was an architect and sponsor of the 1978 Nonproliferation Act
and served as Chairman of the Senate Government Affairs committee from 1978
until 1995. In 1998, Glenn became the oldest person to visit space at the
age of 77. He retired from the Senate in 1999. Glenn is a recipient
of the Congressional Gold Medal and the Congressional Space Medal of Honor.
Gordon
Hirabayashi
Hirabayashi openly defied the forced relocation
and internment of Japanese Americans during World War II. As an
undergraduate at the University of Washington, he refused the order to report
for evacuation to an internment camp, instead turning himself in to the FBI to
assert his belief that these practices were racially discriminatory. Consequently, he was convicted by a U.S.
Federal District Court in Seattle of defying the exclusion order and violating
curfew. Hirabayashi appealed his conviction all the way to the U.S.
Supreme Court, which ruled against him in 1943. Following World War II
and his time in prison, Hirabayashi obtained his doctoral degree in sociology
and became a professor. In 1987, his conviction was overturned by the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. Hirabayashi died on January
2, 2012.
Dolores
Huerta
Huerta is a civil rights, workers, and women’s
advocate. With Cesar Chavez, she co-founded the National Farmworkers
Association in 1962, which later became the United Farm Workers of
America. Huerta has served as a community activist and a political
organizer, and was influential in securing the passage of California’s
Agricultural Labor Relations Act of 1975, and disability insurance for
farmworkers in California. In 2002, she founded the Dolores Huerta
Foundation, an organization dedicated to developing community organizers and
national leaders. In 1998, President Clinton awarded her the Eleanor
Roosevelt Award for Human Rights.
Jan Karski
Karski served as an officer in the Polish
Underground during World War II and carried among the first eye-witness
accounts of the Holocaust to the world. He worked as a courier, entering
the Warsaw ghetto and the Nazi Izbica transit camp, where he saw first-hand the
atrocities occurring under Nazi occupation. Karski later traveled to
London to meet with the Polish government-in-exile and with British government
officials. He subsequently traveled to the United States and met with
President Roosevelt. Karski published Story of a Secret State,
earned a Ph.D. at Georgetown University, and became a professor at Georgetown’s
School of Foreign Service. Born in 1914, Karski became a U.S. citizen in
1954 and died in 2000.
Juliette
Gordon Low
Born in 1860, Low founded the Girl Scouts in
1912. The organization strives to teach girls self-reliance and
resourcefulness. It also encourages girls to seek fulfillment in the
professional world and to become active citizens in their communities.
Since 1912, the Girl Scouts has grown into the largest educational organization
for girls and has had over 50 million members. Low died in 1927.
This year, the Girl Scouts celebrate their 100th Anniversary, calling 2012 “The
Year of the Girl.”
Toni
Morrison
One of our nation’s most celebrated novelists,
Morrison is renowned for works such as Song of Solomon, Jazz, and Beloved,
for which she won a Pulitzer Prize in 1988. When she became the first
African American woman to win a Nobel Prize in 1993, Morrison’s citation
captured her as an author “who in novels characterized by visionary force and
poetic import, gives life to an essential aspect of American reality.”
She created the Princeton Atelier at Princeton University to convene artists
and students. Morrison continues to write today.
Shimon
Peres
An ardent advocate for Israel's security and for
peace, Shimon Peres was elected the ninth President of Israel in 2007.
First elected to the Knesset in 1959, he has served in a variety of positions
throughout the Israeli government, including in twelve Cabinets as Foreign
Minister, Minister of Defense, and Minister of Transport and
Communications. Peres served as Prime Minister from 1984-1986 and
1995-1996. Along with Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and then-PLO
Chairman Yasser Arafat, Peres won the 1994 Nobel Peace Prize for his work as
Foreign Minister during the Middle East peace talks that led to the Oslo
Accords. Through his life and work, he has strengthened the unbreakable bonds
between Israel and the United States.
John Paul
Stevens
Stevens served as an Associate Justice of the
U.S. Supreme Court from 1975 to 2010, when he retired as the third
longest-serving Justice in the Court’s history. Known for his
independent, pragmatic and rigorous approach to judging, Justice Stevens and
his work have left a lasting imprint on the law in areas such as civil rights,
the First Amendment, the death penalty, administrative law, and the separation
of powers. He was nominated to the Supreme Court by President Gerald
Ford, and previously served as a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Seventh Circuit. Stevens is a veteran of World War II, in which he served
as a naval intelligence officer and was awarded the Bronze Star.
Pat
Summitt
In addition to accomplishing an outstanding
career as the all-time winningest leader among all NCAA basketball coaches,
Summitt has taken the University of Tennessee to more Final Four appearances
than any other coach and has the second best record of NCAA Championships in
basketball. She has received numerous awards, including being named
Naismith Women’s Collegiate Coach of the Century. Off the court, she has
been a spokesperson against Alzheimer's. The Pat Summitt Foundation will
make grants to nonprofits to provide education and awareness, support to
patients and families, and research to prevent, cure and ultimately eradicate early
onset dementia, Alzheimer’s type.
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