| Peace Scholar Picks Thich Quang Do As
2007 Nobel Peace Prize Recipient |
| |
San Francisco, CA – October 11, 2007 -- “If I had to pick who will win
this year’s Nobel Peace Prize, I’d go with Vietnamese monk Thich Quang
Do,” declares Scott A. Hunt, peace scholar and author of the award-winning
book
The Future of Peace: On the Front Lines with
the World’s Great Peacemakers. “He’s the real deal -- a courageous,
steadfast, peacemaker who, against seemingly insurmountable odds, has
spent decades advocating for peace, justice, and religious freedom.
He’s been imprisoned, interrogated, threatened, denounced, banished,
and placed under house arrest, and still he has continued his struggle.
”
Thich Quang Do received the 2006 Rafto Prize, but he remains largely
unknown outside of human rights circles. “I think this is the year for
Thich Quang Do, given his accomplishments, his age, the situation in
Burma, and the need of the Nobel Committee to keep the award from turning
into a big-name-only prize.”
“Admittedly, it is notoriously difficult to guess who will receive a
Nobel Peace Prize,” Hunt notes. “In part, that is because the Nobel
Committee has in recent times loosely defined what activities qualify
as peacemaking. In part it is because they often like to overlook highly
visible figures and pluck candidates from obscurity in order to draw
attention to their worthy causes.”
Scott A Hunt is one of the few writers in the world to have interviewed
many of the Nobel Peace Prize recipients in their home countries, including
the Dalai Lama, Aung San Suu Kyi, John Hume, President Oscar Arias,
Betty Williams, and Mairead Corrigan Maguire. He has also interviewed
many perennial nominees, including Maha Ghosananda, Thich Quang Do,
Thich Nhat Hanh, and Jane Goodall, and he used to correspond with Mother
Teresa. Hunt, a graduate of Harvard, spent years traveling to war zones
to try to draw lessons from seemingly intractable conflicts. He appears
widely as a guest on radio programs and lectures at universities and
forums on peacemaking. Hunt has twice been quoted in the New York Times.
“The bets are overwhelmingly in favor of Gore winning this year’s Nobel
Peace Prize. I applaud Gore’s work, but he is rich, he is powerful,
and he has saturated the media with his message, especially after the
Oscar-winning documentary about him and the Emmy that he won. Simply
put, he doesn’t need the prize at all. At some point, doesn’t it just
become a vanity award for him?”
“Of course, I think his chances increase if he is selected as a co-recipient
with the little-known Canadian activist Sheila Watt-Cloutier.”
“A more deserving choice is Vietnamese dissident Thich Quang Do. If
the prize means what it used to mean, Thich Quang Do will win.” The
Communist state press has attacked the 79-year-old monk as a “renegade”
who has “abused people’s sympathy” in an attempt “to cause social disorder.”
Thich Quang Do responds with laughter and kindness.
Thich Quang Do recently called on the UN to take emergency action in
Burma noting, "For almost 200 years, the people of Burma and Vietnam
shared the same fate under colonial rule, with repression of our faith
and the dismantling of our clergy. Over the past decades, we have both
suffered oppression under military or totalitarian dictatorships. We
come together in a common aspiration for the right to life and freedom."
###
Scott A. Hunt's contact information: Telephone: 415.377.5000 - Fax:
866.294.9778
Regular Mail: 465 1/2 Sanchez Street San Francisco, CA 94114
email:
scottahunt@comcast.net
- Website:
www.scottahunt.com

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