About Us

 

Since our first award in 2000, we have honored some who are known around the world and some who remain anonymous. All have sacrificed for their ideals.

 
 

About the Prize

 

John Train (1928-2022), who was professionally involved with Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, proposed “Civil Courage” to name the virtue that Solzhenitsyn exemplified. In 1987, Train established the Civil Courage Prize to honor brave individuals who pursue justice for their societies. Recipients are chosen by the Train Foundation’s Board of Trustees.

Since our first award in 2000, we have honored some who are known around the world and some who remain anonymous. All have sacrificed for their ideals.

 

"The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing."

— Edmund Burke

Announcement

Makda Mehari Appointed as the Executive Director of the Civil Courage Prize

>> read the Announcement

 

Trustees and Officers

 

In Memoriam

 

Advisors

 

Ambassador Glenn R.W. Babb

Prof. Philip C. Bobbitt

Tommy Bruce

Sir Jeremy Greenstock

Bill Keller

Zeid Ra'ad Zeid Al Hussein

Missie Rennie

Lydia Cacho Ribeiro

C. Bowdoin Train

Lisa Train

Nina Train

Suzy Wahba

Zachary Wydra

Ambassador Frank G. Wisner

 
 

Past Advisors

 

The Hon. Richard J. Goldstone
former Justice of the Constitutional Court of South Africa

Virginia Armat Hurt 
Journalist

The Hon. Jeane J. Kirkpatrick
former United States Representative to the United Nations

Count Aymar de Lastours
Member of the French Institute of International Relations

The Hon. John K. Menzies
former US Ambassador

Kumi Naidoo
Executive Director of Greenpeace

John Dimitri Panitza
Chairman of the Free and Democratic Bulgaria Foundation

The Hon. Claiborne Pell
former US Senator

Baroness Patricia Rawlings
UK Parliamentarian

John Temple Swing
former President, Foreign Policy Association

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
Author

Sir Robert Wade-Gery
former British High Commissioner to India

Grace Kennan Warnecke
National Committee on American Foreign Policy

 

“The key to the spread of freedom and democracy is the active citizen, who operates in his or her own country, fertilising the seeds which grow in that particular soil.”

— The Rt Hon Lord Hurd of Westwell

 

Administration

 

GHS Philanthropy Management

Laura Greenberg, Editor