Global Panel Home Page
ProfileInitiativesEventsPartnersPress CenterCharityContact

GPlogo





HANNO R. ELLENBOGEN CITIZENSHIP AWARD

Since 2000, Global Panel has partnered with the Prague Society for International Cooperation in annually presenting the Hanno R. Ellenbogen Citizenship Award, which recognizes high achievement in public service to Central and Eastern Europe. The recipients donate the financial part of the award to an exceptional young person of their choice. The recipients have been: Vladimir Ashkenazy and the Conducting Corps of the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra/Lukas Vondracek, Madeleine Albright/Petra Prochazkova, Vaclav Havel/Andrej Dynko, Lord Robertson of Port Ellen/David Hodan, Milos Forman/Students of Písek Film Academy (2007: Martin Palouš), King Michael I of Romania/Petrisor Ostafie, and Alexander Millinkevich/Pavel Sieviarynets.

View the brochure from the latest award ceremony here.

The Hanno R. Ellenbogen Citizenship Award honors a woman who grew up in post-war Germany.The years spent in a divided Europe instilled in her a firm belief in positive action. Her commitment to ideals of public service and the common good helped to break down the barriers which divide people from people in their shared destiny.

 


Award Recipients

 

 

Vladimir Ashkenazy devoted his first years as a musician to the piano. After winning first prizes in Brussels in 1956 and Moscow in 1962, he spent three decades touring the great musical centres of the world. From the 1970s, he became in creasingly active as a conductor and held positions with the Philharmonia Orchestra, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Cleveland Orchestra and Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin. From 1998 to 2003 Ashkenazy led the Conducting Corps of the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra, with whom he undertook the major Prokofiev-Shostakovich series in 2003. He became the NHK Symphony Orchestra’s Music Director at the beginning of the 2004/05 season. He continues to perform as pianist throughout Europe,Asia and America, and in 2007 he accepted the position of Principal Conductor and Artistic Advisor of the Sydney Symphony commencing January 2009.


Maestro Ashkenazy donated the financial part of his award to the gifted young pianist Lukas Vondracek. Born in the Czech Republic in 1986 Lukas Vondracek’s musical ability was spotted at the age of two by his mother, herself a professional pianist. He gave his first concert at the age of 4 and now, at the age of 20, he has visited 22 different countries giving in excess of 850 concerts. Vladimir Ashkenazy was the conductor when Lukas made his debut with the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra in May 2002 with concerts in Prague and Italy. Since then he has appeared frequently with the orchestra, including a major USA tour, and concerts in Cologne, Vienna, Lucerne, Bad Kissingen, and Birmingham's Symphony Hall.

 

 

 



Václav Havel grew up in a circle which maintained Czechoslovakia’s independent culture in defiance of the Communist regime of the time. Excluded from higher education, he made his name in the 1960s with satirical plays which contributed to the intellectual atmosphere of the Prague Spring. During the normalisation period which followed the Soviet invasion he took menial jobs whilst his work was published in samizdat. He was one of the first three spokesmen for Charter 77, and a member of the Committee for the Defence of the Unjustly Prosecuted. He was sentenced to four and a half years’ hard labour, resulting in a breakdown in his health. After his release in 1983 he continued to be a leading member of the opposition movement which culminated in the Velvet Revolution of 1989.He was elected the first President of a free Czechoslovakia and subsequently of the Czech Republic.


President Havel donated the financial part of his award to Andrej Dynko, the editor-in-chief of the indepependent Belarusian newspaper Nasha Niva. Openly critical to President Lukashenko’s regime, and the only major newspaper written in Belarusian, Nasha Niva has become an important symbol of freedom and independence. Dynko is a Graduate from Minsk State Linguistic University, and holds an MA in International Relations. Until August 2000, he also taught at his Alma Mater.
From 2002, Dynko has been the Vice-President of the Belarusian PEN Center.

 

 

 


Madeleine Korbel Albright served as the 64th Secretary of State of the United States. She was the first woman Secretary of State and the highest-ranking woman in the history of the US government. As Secretary, Dr.Albright reinforced America’s alliances, advocated democracy and human rights, and promoted American trade and business abroad. Serving as a member of the President’s Cabinet & National Security Council for 8 years, Dr. Albright was the US Permanent Representative to the UN from 1993-1997. Dr.Albright is the first Michael & Virginia Mortara Endowed Professor in the Practice of Diplomacy at the Georgetown School of Foreign Service. She is the Chairman of The National Democratic Institute for International Affairs and founder of the Albright Group, a global strategy firm delivering solutions and advice for businesses in a rapidly changing world.

Secretary Albright donated the financial part of her award to Petra Procházková. Procházková is a Czech journalist and humanitarian worker. She is best known as a war correspondent to the conflict areas of the former Soviet Union. Procházková studied journalism at Charles University in Prague. In 1989 she started work at the newspaper Lidové noviny. In 1992 she became Lidové noviny's Moscow correspondent. Here she began covering conflict areas - Abkhazia being the first. During the Russian constitutional crisis of 1993 she was the only journalist that stayed in the besieged Russian White House. In 1994, together with fellow journalist Jaromír Štětina, Procházková founded the independent journalism agency Epicentrum dedicated to war reporting. In the following years she covered events in Chechnya, Abkhazia, Ossetia, Georgia, Tajikistan, Afghanistan, Nagorny Karabakh, Kurdistan, Kashmir and East Timor.

 

 

 

 


Lord Robertson, born on the Isle of Islay in Scotland,was elected to the House of Commons in 1978. After the Labour Party won the elections in 1997, Prime Minister Blair appointed him Defence Secretary of the United Kingdom. In August 1999 he was selected as the tenth Secretary General of NATO, and the same month received a life peerage, taking the title Lord Robertson of Port Ellen. For 7 years he was on the Council of the Royal Institute of International Affairs (Chatham House) where he now serves as Joint President. He has been awarded the Grand Cross of the German Order of Merit and the Grand Cross of the Order of the Star of Romania and was named joint Parliamentarian of the Year in 1993 for his role during the Maastricht Treaty ratification. He was appointed a member of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth's Privy Council in May 1997.

Lord Robertson donated the financial part of his award to David Hodan. David Hodan first met Lord Robertson in May 2003. Encouraged by Ms Bela Gran Jensen, founder of the “Centipede” movement, he wrote an essay on “What I would do if I were General Secretary of NATO”. Lord Robertson read the essay and asked to meet David, saying that he especially liked the quotation from Charlie Chaplin which David used in the essay: “I am interested in my future because that is where I am going to spend the rest of my life.” The meeting took place within sight of Prague Castle – which David likes to call his “future seat”. A student at the Terezie Brzková 33-35 school in Pilsen, his ambition is one day to become President of this country. As he says himself, he is an “ordinary boy” with the interests of a boy of his age – he reads a lot and works with computers, but he also has a special interest in current world events, politics and medicine. He is particularly concerned about parts of the world where children suffer as a result of military conflict. David is a boy with the courage to say what he thinks, and to have dreams which might come true.

 

 

 

 

Miloš Forman, born in Caslav outside Prague, lost both his partents in the Nazi death camps. After studying in Prague he made his first feature film in 1963: Black Peter, an autobiographical acoount of a teenager in a small Czech town. He gained international recognition with The Loves of a Blonde. Despite this, his next film, The Firemen’s Ball, attracted the attention of the Communist authorities and was banned. After the Soviet invastion of 1968 Forman settled in America, winning international fame with One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest. It swept the Academy Awards, winning all five major Oscars. From his earliest Czechslovakian work through his American period to Goya’s Ghosts, Forman’s directing remains close to the reality of life; its absurdity and transforming joys.

The financial portion of Milos Forman's HRE Citizenship Award has been divided into three part of 50.000,- crowns each to provide scholarships for students of the Film Academy of Miroslav Ond?í?ek in Písek. The first recipient was the 27-year-old student of film, Martin Palouš, who received the Award from Marc Ellenbogen on 11 October 2007 at the celebratory opening of the Písek Film Festival

 

 

 

 

 

His Majesty King Michael I of Romania (b. 1922). King Michael of Romania is a Prince of the Hohenzollern family and a descendant of the first King of Romania, Ferdinand I. He has twice been Head of State in Romania: from 1927-1930 and from 1940-1947, when he was deposed by the Communists, stripped of his citizenship, and banished from the country. Over the next fifty-five years he worked as a mechanic, commercial pilot and businessman and, with his wife Queen Anne,Princess of Bourbon-Parma, brought up their five daughters. In 1997 he said in an interview:“The King is head of state but he is also the first servant of the people. Never forget that."




King Michael donated the financial part of his award to Petrisor Ostafie. Petrisor is a student of Medical Bio-engineering in Iasi. He is an example of someone who, on receiving something, returns more than was given. He proved this by being first a volunteer and then a member of the Board of the Alaturi de Voi (Close to You) Romania Foundation. In addition, his courage in speaking on numerous ocasions about what it means to be living with HIV has become an example for many young people in thesame situation. Petrisor has spent over 4000 hours of voluntary work on programs developed by the Alaturi de Voi Romania Foundation and has brought hope to over 200 young people living with HIV.

 

 

 

 

 

Alexander Millinkevich became involved in the local politics of his home city, Hrodna, in the 1980s. Four years in Algiers, setting up the Faculty of Physics at Sétif University, had given him a wider experience of the world than his contemparies. After the fall of the Soviet Union he entered national politics, becoming Chieff of Staff to one of the oppositions leaders. In 2005 he was chosen by the United Democratic Forces of Belarus as joint candidate of the opposition in the presidential ellections of 2006, to stand against the totalitarian Alexander Lukashenko. He was held by the police before and after the elections of false charges of drunken driving, forgery, drug trafficking and leavin Belarus illegally



Pavel Sieviarynets is a prominent young Belarusain politician leader of the Christian Democratic Party and founder of the Young Front that is the most persecuted political organisation in Belarus. He is also a talented publicist, author of a number of books and articles in which he presents his ideas and values, calling Belarusians to national awaking and protest against autocratic rule.

 

 

 

 

 

 



       
 

About Us - Boards - Initiatives - Guests - Partners - Upcoming Events
Press Center - Charity - Contact - Terms of Use - Home

Official Website of the Global Panel Foundation
Copyright © 2008 Global Panel Foundation. All Rights Reserved