Movie stars have the Oscars, recording artists have the Grammies, newspapers and journalists have the Pulitzers, and grassroots community environmental activists have the Goldman Prize "Ordinary People, Extraordinary Commitment." Seven prizes will be given out, one honeree per continent, at the Opera House ceremony tomorrow night.
What struck me last year was the humility of the recipients. This was best illustrated by two women from India, the unlikely alliance of Rashida Bee, a Muslim, and Champa Devi Shukla, a Hindu. The two crossed cultural barriers to stand together demanding justice from Union Carbide in the twenty year wake of the Bhopal disaster. Through a translater, Bee said in her acceptance speech that she and Shukla, apon hearing of their award, assumed their must be some mistake. People who win $125,000 awards are not like them, Bee's translater said, international award recipients are people who "speak English, have fancy college degrees, and use email accounts." Ha!
I later got to snap their picture as they walked up Van Ness street towards McDonald's after the ceremony reception at City Hall. The two were somewhat bewildered, surrounded by San Franciscans praising them for their activism and speech. Their reactions were delayed as a translator forwarded the accolades in their native language, but within minutes they shook their heads, "yes thanks!"