“As you look at me and listen to me, please remember the often repeated truth that one prisoner of conscience is one too many.”

Nobel Peace Prize Acceptance Speech (2012)

Adopted from Wikiquote. Last update June 3, 2021. History

Help us to complete the source, original and additional information

Do you have more details about the quote "As you look at me and listen to me, please remember the often repeated truth that one prisoner of conscience is one too…" by Aung San Suu Kyi?
Aung San Suu Kyi photo
Aung San Suu Kyi 86
State Counsellor of Myanmar and Leader of the National Leag… 1945

Related quotes

Maurice Barrès photo

“Reality, it cannot be repeated too often, varies with every one of us.”

Maurice Barrès (1862–1923) French novelist

Source: Pène du Bois, Henri (1897). Witty, Wise and Wicked Maxims https://archive.org/stream/wittywisewickedm00peneiala#page/n3/mode/2up, New York: Brentano's, p. 88.

Ann Leckie photo

“When you and the truth speak to me, I do not listen to the truth. I listen to you.”

Antonio Porchia (1885–1968) Italian Argentinian poet

Cuando tú y la verdad me hablan, no escucho a la verdad. Te escucho a ti.
Voces (1943)

Cinda Williams Chima photo
Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. photo

“Santayana's aphorism must be reversed: too often it is those who can remember the past who are condemned to repeat it.”

Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. (1917–2007) American historian, social critic, and public intellectual

The Bitter Heritage: Vietnam and American Democracy (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1966) p. 91

António de Oliveira Salazar photo

“No one has to thank me for accepting the burden, because it is so big sacrifice for me to please or I would not do for kindness to anyone. I do this to for my country, as a duty of conscience, coldly, calmly completed.”

António de Oliveira Salazar (1889–1970) Prime Minister of Portugal

In the speech over as Finance Minister, Speeches, Volume 1 - Page 3; of António de Oliveira Salazar, Oliveira Salazar - Published by Coimbra Editora, 1945

Charlie Brooker photo
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley photo
Salman Rushdie photo

“Too many people had spent too long demonizing or totemizing me to listen seriously to what I had to say.”

Salman Rushdie (1947) British Indian novelist and essayist

Address at Columbia University (1991)
Context: Too many people had spent too long demonizing or totemizing me to listen seriously to what I had to say. In the West, some "friends" turned against me, calling me by yet another set of insulting names. Now I was spineless, pathetic, debased; I had betrayed myself, my Cause; above all, I had betrayed them.
I also found myself up against the granite, heartless certainties of Actually Existing Islam, by which I mean the political and priestly power structure that presently dominates and stifles Muslim societies. Actually Existing Islam has failed to create a free society anywhere on Earth, and it wasn't about to let me, of all people, argue in favor of one.

Related topics