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H.R.H. The Princess of Hanover's Acceptance Speech
U.S.
Fund for UNICEF's Children's Champion Award
Museum
of Fine Arts, Boston - May 20, 2006
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Honored
guests, ladies and gentlemen, good evening
.
May I first express my gratitude to President Chip Lyons (of the
United States Fund for UNICEF) and to Sally Cottingham, as well
as to everyone here in the New England chapter for all their hard
work in making arrangements for this evening's program. I'm sure
the horrendous weather and flooding has greatly complicated your
task. My heart goes out to all the people in wonderful New England
who have been, and still are, suffering through this ordeal.
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Nelson
Mandela, Harry Belafonte, Roger Moore and Jordan's Queen Noor
have all been at this podium before me. I'm humbled. (And in the
case of Queen Noor clearly outranked.) The only thing that is
more daunting than to receive an award whose past recipients are
such monumental humanists and child advocates, is to confront
the painful truth that all our efforts, and the generosity and
commitment of everyone here and so many thousands of others around
the world, continue to be woefully inadequate. It's a bit strange
to be named a "champion" in the early stages of an endless
marathon. I'm reassured to know that all of you are just as committed
to victory as I am - the victory of our common future: the world's
children, our children.
I
am very pleased and proud to accept this award on behalf of AMADE,
created by my mother in 1963. Our organization is served by extraordinary
volunteers around the world under the direction of the no less
extraordinary Mr. Francis Kasasa, whom I'd like to thank for being
with me here this evening.
Theirs is a daily, often incredibly frustrating and thankless
struggle to advance the programs and projects you got a small
glimpse of in the video. They are the recipients of this award,
true "champions of children". I know they are deeply
touched and delighted by the recognition you bestow tonight on
their tireless efforts.
This award
will enhance our ability to access and influence world governments
and lobby their leaders to find positive approaches and solutions
to vital political, economic, environmental, religious and humanitarian
issues.
At AMADE we have had many successes of which we can be justly
proud. And of course UNICEF dwarfs our achievements with its
myriad activities across the globe. But there is so much still
to do. This award will be something for us to live up to. Less
a prize than an inspiration, and a permanent reminder of what's
expected of us.
While I'm glad
to se success, however small, what interests and motivates me
more is all that hasn't been done. I think optimism is a choice
one makes. For me, the cup is half full. Or maybe a quarter full.
Or at least there is a cup. Or there could be a cup
In child
advocacy, that's the only attitude to have.
Recently
there has been extensive media coverage of a program in the
beleaguered kingdom of Nepal that really inspires me. In a remarkable
campaign supported by UNICEF and an alliance of many other organizations
and the Nepali Health Ministry, a virtual army of 50.000 volunteer
Mothers has trudged through fiercely challenging mountain terrain
to deliver measles vaccine across the nation. These mostly illiterate
women, trained in only the very basics of primary healthcare
and injection technique, managed to reduce measles related deaths
by 90% last year, saving as many as 5000 lives.
In you I
see dedicated men and women representing a vast spectrum of
talent and expertise. To know that such an amazing resource
is serving the cause of positive change fuels and reinforces
my optimism. If the Nepali Mothers can eradicate measles, imagine
what YOUR volunteer army can do!
Again, success falls in the shadow of what still needs doing.
More than four million infants, about the number of babies born
in the US, still die each year for lack of incredibly simple
and cheap healthcare materials. So much to do
Like
many of you, I'm sure, I have had first hand experience seeing
short-sighted national governments, self-aggrandizing local
authorities, and powerful corporate interests, interact with
distressed citizens, dedicated NGOs, and passionate activists
on virtually every continent. There is no shortage of good,
even great ideas. But they all too often languish for years
in reports or commissions, or are damned by the faint praise
of non-binding declarations, buried in paper, lost in deliberation.
Fundamental changes that are critical to ensure a thriving human
future seem to move further and further away even as they become
more and more urgent.
In our struggle we, like the women of Nepal, face Himalayan
challenges. But we're a strange breed-exhilarated by challenges,
energized by obstacles. Like alpinists, we climb each mountain
to get a look at the next mountain! This evening I feel I'm
surrounded by remarkable mountaineers.
..
Along with
specific program activity, our mission is to mobilize the conscience
of the world on behalf of children.
Our task
is to look beyond the selfish interests of governments, corporations
and ideologies to the broader interests of the planet itself
and the well being of its six billion citizens. Our guiding
principle is the quality of the legacy we shall leave to those
who will inherit this ever smaller planet of ours. And the scope
of the mission is vast, unlimited. It encompasses virtually
every area of endeavor. Because rescuing children only to hand
them a world in turmoil and the bleakest of futures is morally
intolerable.
No matter
how laudable and important it is to attack disease, famine,
the devastation of war, illiteracy, and the host of other ills
that assault so many millions of the world's children, if we
don't equally commit ourselves to bettering the world they will
live in, our efforts are reduced to mere "first aid".
First aid is a good start. Period.
There are
so many areas where we can and must commit ourselves to improvement
or radical change. They may seem to be far out of the box of
child-advocacy, but I believe they are critical to it. A few
spring to mind.
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Monetary
and tax reform to energize entrepreneurship in developing
countries. Here I think of debt restructuring and
forgiveness. And the exciting possibilities of micro-financing,
where remarkably small investments can produce truly
significant results.
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Responsible
commerce and equitable capitalism. There are so
many initiatives in this direction, some excruciatingly
small and fragile, others quickly growing stronger.
The simple premise that a "fair deal is a good
deal" is, I believe, truly gaining ground.
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Trade
and tariff reform. We all know how third world farmers
and growers are shut out of the world markets. With
a direct and dire effect on their families' wellbeing.
Progress is slow here, and complicated, but there
is progress nonetheless.
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Sustainable
uses of forests and oceans. We, the developed world,
with our insatiable demand, are responsible for
the pillaging of resources that leave wastelands
behind. Each of us can help make changes here by
simple consumer discipline.
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Clean
water for all. We possess the technology and resources
to make huge contributions in this direction. UNICEF
is very active here. But it's an area of great opportunity
for innovative solutions.
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In
health and medicine, there is enormous potential
for generic medicine development and patent liberalization
for third world manufacturers. I don't call for
condemning Big Pharma. Rather, we can encourage
and applaud results.
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Multi-culturalism
and the media. With notable exceptions, we export
images of a world of white heroes and colored villains.
Violence is called "excitement", vulgarity
reigns. Our producers claim that's what the people
want. Let's encourage our producers to stop underestimating
their audiences
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Women's
rights. Don't get me started
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My
list goes on and on- to conflict healing, real energy
economy, sustainable and livable cities, general
arms de-escalation and relentless suppression of
arms trafficking, reform of international institutions,
human rights. Each of these areas directly affects
the lives of children and the adults they will become.
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Oh, dear
I
guess now you know why my Mother once introduced me as her "daughter
the communist!" But no. I was her daughter the citizen,
devoted to the values she herself instilled in me and that she
developed right here in the US.
A friend
suggested that my message is that the only was to really help
children is to cure all the world's ills. Well
yes. I guess
that is my message. Each of us, in unspectacular ways, can be
an agent of positive change by making simple disciplined choices
every day. By remembering that in the age of globalization,
it doesn't just take a village to bring up a child. It takes
a world.
Today we're
at war on terror, as we must be. Especially against the terror
in the eyes and hearts and minds of millions of children worldwide.
Children who face the world alone after losing parents to AIDS.
Children at risk of starvation or a host of preventable diseases,
living conditions and social situations. Children who live in
the crossfire of war and suicidal madness.
We want
to eradicate crimes against children, from slavery to sex trafficking,
to forced recruitment into guerrilla armies to child labor,
and more.
But we live
in countries whose official policies directly or indirectly
destroy more children's lives than we can ever hope to save.
We can't be child advocates and feel comfortable with that.
People often
point to regimes in the world who's tyrannical, corrupt, or
simply incompetent governments deserve far more of the blame
that I seem to heap on our Western democracies. But I hold our
societies and ourselves to a higher standard. Partly because
I know that in our societies we can actually get things done!
Our freedom gives us power, and a duty to use it to make essential
changes.
I suppose
I hold America to the highest standard. The daughter of an American,
I have very deep ties to this country. I believe its core values
are the same as mine. And like the rest of the world, I admire
and appreciate American ingenuity, energy, and can-do attitude.
So please forgive me if I seem to be preaching. I think that
holding someone to the highest standard is the sincerest form
of flattery.
When people
are encouraged to think as parents and grandparents instead
of as corporate leaders or politicians- when they are prompted
to be motivated by who they are rather than what they do- there
is a quite amazing agreement about human values and about the
priorities of those values.
Churchill
declared that "politicians think of the next election.
Statesmen think of the next generation." It's too easy
to complain about or denigrate politicians, no matter how deserving
or maddening they may be. It's our job to require our politicians
to act like statesmen. We must keep reminding all decision makers
of who they are. And remind them who WE are! The people they're
accountable to, at the ballot box and the cash register.
So much
to be done. That must be done. That can be done. So that the
children we rescue from abominable conditions don't have to
face an empty future. So that our children can point proudly
to the example we set for them, and continue the work we, inevitably,
will never get near finishing.
..
Your presence
here tonight bears witness to your active belief in the cause
of child-advocacy and to your exceptional generosity. I offer
you my deepest thanks. Many of you are very involved in outreach
activity of your own. I'm honored to be in your company. AMADE
and I shall do our best to be worthy of the honor you have bestowed
upon us this evening. We look forward, with optimism and energy,
to working with UNICEF and with you toward filling the cup.
See you in the mountains!
Source:
Consulat Général de Monaco à New York
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