On 30 April 2012, at a reception hosted by the Australian Embassy in Harare, Sekai Holland was announced to be the 15th recipient of the
Sydney Peace Prize, Australia's only international award for peace. Professor Stuart Rees, Chair of the
Sydney Peace Foundation said, 'In addition to her work for the education of rural women and her founding of Australia's anti-Apartheid movement fifty years ago, Sekai Holland has been a significant leader of non-violent, democracy campaigns, and is a key figure in her country's national dialogue on how to heal the deep wounds of social conflict.' Sometimes perceived as controversial, the prize's previous recipients have included Professor
Muhammad Yunus, Archbishop
Desmond Tutu,
Mary Robinson (former
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, and former President of Ireland), Dr
Hanan Ashrawi, former Governor General Sir
William Deane, Australia's 'Father of Reconciliation'
Patrick Dodson, the Indian novelist and human rights campaigner
Arundhati Roy and the distinguished American academic and activist, Professor
Noam Chomsky. Sekai Holland traveled to Australia in November to give the
City of Sydney Peace Prize Lecture in the Sydney Town Hall on Wednesday 7 November 2012, receiving the 2012 Peace Prize in a gala ceremony the next day. ==References==