, Master of Ceremony from the
Austrian Service Abroad Daniel J. Schuster, Austrian ambassador to Australia Dr. Hannes Porias, Awardee Eva Marks with a Letter of Congratulations from the prime minister of Australia
Julia Gillard, Australian MoP
Michael Danby, Auschwitz
Holocaust survivor Saba Feniger, Israeli diplomat to Australia Einat Weiss On October 17, 2006, the Chinese historian
Pan Guang was awarded the first AHMA prize.
Michael Prochazka and
Austrian Servand Abroad of the Year 2006 Martin Wallner attended the reception in Shanghai. The Brazilian journalist
Alberto Dines was crowned as the AHMA 2007 winner on October 24, 2007 at the Austrian consulate in
Rio de Janeiro for his effort to establish
Casa Stefan Zweig, a museum devoted to
Stefan Zweig in
Petropolis, and his book
Morte no paraíso, a tragédia de Stefan Zweig. In March 2008, Robert Hébras was assigned with the award at the Austrian embassy in Paris in presence of
Beate Klarsfeld and
Andreas Maislinger, founder of the
Austrian Holocaust Memorial Service and initiator of the AHMA. Robert Hébras is one of only six survivors of the massacre of Oradour and is still giving tours at the age of 84. For 2009 Jay M. Ipson received the Austrian Holocaust Memorial Award. Austrian Ambassador to the United States of America Dr. Christian Prosl visited the
Virginia Holocaust Museum and presented the award to the co-founder and Executive Director. Ipson is a Holocaust survivor from
Lithuania, who was deported to the
Kovno Ghetto at the age of six. On October 28, 2010, the Austrian ambassador to Australia, Dr. Hannes Porias, conferred the award to the Austrian-born Holocaust survivor
Eva Marks in Melbourne and read a letter of congratulations from the president of the Austrian parliament,
Barbara Prammer. Also the prime minister of Australia,
Julia Gillard, sent a congratulatory letter, conferred by the Australian MP
Michael Danby. ==Recipients==