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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Hunting Down The Naked Truth
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Posted Sunday, April 20, 2003; 14.23 BST
Mediafax/Northfoto
Pointing the finger: Dinescu believes exposing Romania's sordid past will let his country move on
You wouldn't expect the publisher of Plai cu Boi — Romania's satirical Playboy-style monthly — to make a list of heroic Europeans, but Mircea Dinescu, 52, is not your average purveyor of the nude female form. In the 1980s, his opposition to the Stalinist dictatorship of Nicolae Ceausescu made him a target of the dreaded Securitate, the secret police; in 1989, he was sacked as editor of a literary magazine and put under house arrest for criticizing Ceausescu in an interview with the French newspaper Libération. Later that year, when the hated regime was overthrown by a popular uprising, he was among those who broke into the state television building at the revolution's defining moment. Appearing on TV screens nationwide, he told stunned Romanians: "The tyrant has gone!"

More than a decade later, Dinescu continues to hound those who had links to Ceausescu. A member of a special council set up in 2000 to investigate the Securitate's archives, Dinescu frequently and forcefully demands that its files be made public and that Ceausescu's cronies be named and shamed. But he has met with open resistance from officials and politicians; only a third of the 14,700 files requested have so far been released by the SRI, the current Romanian Intelligence Service. Dinescu says the government, made up of former communists (now called Social Democrats) and nationalists, is behind the stonewalling.

The government argues that publishing the names of former Securitate officers and informers would jeopardize national security. Dinescu allows that it would "provoke an earthquake," but he believes passionately that the council's work must be allowed to go forward if the country is to shake off its communist legacy. "What is going on shows that the country cannot function — that there is no desire to uncover the truth of 50 years of Securitate," he says. Many ordinary Romanians feel his frustration: last month a 3,000-strong human chain marched around the Palace of the Parliament in downtown Bucharest, to show support for Dinescu's cause.

Opponents are quick to suggest that his status as a TV celebrity and girlie-mag publisher means his role as a crusader cannot be taken seriously. Dinescu disdains the criticism and, as a poet and former dissident, sees no contradiction. Although last year he claimed to have "hung up his revolutionary jacket," Dinescu is still intent on baring all.

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

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