Benjamin Prize

The Benjamin Prize was established as a Norwegian prize to counter racism in 2002. The prize is awarded in memory of Benjamin Hermansen, who at the age of 15 years, was murdered in Holmlia, Søndre Nordstrand in Oslo, Norway. The death was racially motivated.[1]

The Benjamin Prize won by Sogn Upper Secondary School in 2008 is exhibited in the foyer of Kuben Upper Secondary School, winner of the Benjamin Prize in 2018

The prize is awarded each year on 27 January in conjunction with the commemoration of the Holocaust. On this date Soviet forces liberated Nazi concentration camps in Auschwitz and Birkenau. The prize is awarded to a school that actively works against racism and discrimination.

The work for which the award is given is to be characterized by:

  • Anchoring: The school's work against racism and discrimination represent a long-term commitment.
  • Involvement: The school's work against racism and discrimination involves faculty and students at the school.
  • Highlighting: The school's work against racism and discrimination is visible both in the school and in the broader community.

The prize consists of 250,000 kroner, and a miniature bust of Benjamin Hermansen, created by Ivar Sjaastad. The original bust is placed at Holmlia.

The Norwegian Directorate for Education and Training awards the prize. The jury which determines the recipient consists of Marit Hermansen (Benjamin’s mother), and representatives from the Antiracism Center, the Sami Parliament of Norway, Union of Education Norway,[2] Parents Committee for Primary and Lower Secondary Education,[3] and the Norwegian Center for Studies of Holocaust and Religious Minorities.

Winners

gollark: Esolang idea: input a description for an esolang and it will generate an interpreter for it and run the description for your esolang as code in it.
gollark: That... wouldn't be much like haskell?
gollark: Also verbose code.
gollark: Do you *want* OOP code, though?
gollark: I have no idea, and it was kind of a bad idea anyway.

References

  1. This article was translated at request from the Norwegian Wikipedia article on this subject (retrieved 11 October 2008). See the interwiki link for the material in the original in Norwegian.
  2. The Union of Education Norway is Norway's largest trade union for teaching personnel with more than 140,000 members. Archived December 19, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  3. A Norwegian representative organization of parents with children in primary school which serves as an advisory body for the Ministry in matters related to cooperation between home and school.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.