Helping Hands
Jamie Oliver, Christina Noble, Magdalena and Hanna Graaf, Nebahat Akkoc, Isidoro Macías, Hannes Urban, Peter Hoeg, Simon Pánek, Dikembe Mutombo
Inspiration
J.K. Rowling, Khaled Abu Ajaima, David Beckham, Stefano Dambruoso, Anna Politkovskaya, James Moulton
Innovators
Barbara and Tomasz Sadowski, Sergei Kostin, Nick Moon and Martin Fisher
Activists
Bono, Zackie Achmat, Natasa Kandic, Caoimhe Butterly, Leonard van Baelen
Alchemists
Roger Daltrey, Albina du Boisrouvray, Carine Russo
Green Team
Josef Krecek, Asbjörn Björgvinsson, Yannis Boutaris
Hate Busters
Iris Berben, Mircea Dinescu, Claude Bébéar, Andrea Riccardi
Online Heroes
The Peoples' Choice, David Beckham, Eva Klonowski, Johann Olav Koss, Svetlana C, Zinedine Zidane


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Acting Out Against Racism
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Posted Sunday, April 20, 2003; 14.23 BST
Iris Berben's career has made her one of Germany's best-loved film stars: for more than three decades she has starred in a series of popular comedies and police thrillers, won a clutch of acting awards, and twice was voted Germany's sexiest woman. But Berben has also pursued a parallel career in Germany as an ambassador for Christian-Jewish understanding. It has not been without danger — at some public appearances she has had a heavy police guard. "I have got used to hate mail and graffiti on my house and car," Berben told TIME. "People sometimes ask me if I still want to go on, and I do, not because I'm a hero or courageous but because I don't want to leave the occasion to these people."

For many of the past 30 years, Berben, a lanky, 52-year-old brunet, has hosted gatherings where she reads texts chosen to fight "German silence" on anti-Semitism and xenophobia. Recently, for example, she has been mixing excerpts from Anne Frank's diary with others from the diaries of Joseph Goebbels, Hitler's Propaganda Minister. "There is anti-Semitism in other countries," says Berben. "But I believe we have a different history — a history for which we are accountable. The way the Third Reich worked is not comparable to any other country."

Raised a Roman Catholic, Berben became interested in Israel during the 1967 Six-Day War: it made her ponder the atrocities committed by the Germans against the Jews, an issue barely touched upon in her school days. When three years ago there was a spate of anti-Semitic attacks in Germany, Berben was one of the first public figures to speak out. Wolfgang Thierse, president of the German parliament, noted that there "are only a few artists who fight for democracy and tolerance so consistently and with so much credibility as Iris Berben."

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FROM THE APRIL 28, 2003 ISSUE OF TIME MAGAZINE; POSTED SUNDAY, APRIL 20, 2003

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