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In the weeks that followed September 11, we received the statements of 18 of the living Nobel Peace Prize winners.

As time has moved on, there have been hard questions to be answered, not only about September 11 but also about subsequent events . People who normally consider themselves pacifists or who are vehemently opposed to violence have had to examine, how do you respond to the killing of 6000 innocent people? Or the killing of young vacationers in Bali, or humanitarian workers in Iraq? People who support military action are also having to ask themselves, what about the fact that the victims of these wars are largely civilians? And are we simply escalating the problem by reacting militarily?


For some of the Laureates, what they said after 9/11 is not what they would say today. The universal good will and the outpouring of support not just from these men and women but from people around the world, has changed as our military responses to 9/11 have met with disagreement.

But we can still see through the statements of the Nobel Peace Prize Laureates that they ask themselves the same types of questions we ask ourselves. We can use their statements here to examine what has happened since. And we can use the conversation with these men and women that one of our readers aptly described as "our most precious of human resources" to bring a range of wisdom and experience to the discussion that is not available elsewhere.

To stay updated as new statements come in, please join our private mailing list.



credits

Nelson Mandela, Desmond
Tutu, F. W. de Klerk,
South Africa

His Holiness the 14th
Dalai Lama of Tibet

Kim Dae-jung
South Korea

Yasser Arafat
Palestine

Shimon Peres,
Israel

Dr. Jose Ramos Horta,
East Timor

Archbishop Belo,
East Timor

Oscar Arias
Costa Rica

Rigoberta Menchú Tum,
Guatemala

Adolfo Pérez Esquivel,
Argentina

Mikhail Gorbachev,
Russia

John Hume,
Northern Ireland

David Trimble,
Northern Ireland

Joseph Rotblat,
Pugwash Conferences

Mairead Maguire,
Northern Ireland

Jody Williams,
Intl. Camp. to Ban Landmines


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Find out more. See more photos from Michael Collopy, with powerful personal writings of 75 peacemakers. Click here.


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Photographs are from the book Architects of Peace. Copyright (c) 2000 by Michael Collopy. Reprinted with permission of New World Library, Novato, CA.