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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Tutu Alicante

Interviewed January 4, 2011

I have many heroes. There are many people out there that are incredible human beings. My biggest hero by far is Nelson Mandela. I admire Nelson Mandela for being able to come back from decades of prison and carrying on as if that had not happened and really giving the words “freedom” and “democracy” its true meaning in the way he lived, in the way he governed, in the way he left government when it was time for him to leave. So by far, my biggest hero is Nelson Mandela. There are many people out there who I admire their commitment, their unwavering and steadfast commitment to change and to democracy and to freedom. Martin Luther King is one of those individuals.

Seeing what he was selflessly able to do just to ensure that people, black people and poor people in America could live like real human beings, to me, has no definition. But every day, I mean, every day in real life, I run into people who are incredible human beings. I’m currently attending the Oslo Freedom Forum, and some of the individuals that I’ve met, from women who openly defy the Saudi Arabian law or ban on women driving, or women who survive sex trafficking and slavery who go on to dedicate their life to take other people out of those places, or women who are abducted and tortured and raped, then come back and work toward peace, toward a peaceful Zimbabwe, et cetera – all these incredible people, every single day that just make me feel that I’m not doing enough for my country.