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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Peter's Sense of Charity
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Posted Sunday, April 20, 2003; 14.23 BST
Peter Hoeg enjoys huge success as a writer. But he's even more successful as a human being. The acclaimed, publicity-shy author of Smilla's Sense of Snow (published in Britain as Miss Smilla's Feeling for Snow) shares his wealth with people in need. After the 1993 breakthrough of Smilla — TIME called it the best novel of the year — Hoeg decided to donate all the profits from a later novel, The Woman and the Ape, to women and children in the developing world.

Inspired by his travels in Africa and his Kenyan wife, the 46-year-old Hoeg in 1996 established the Lolwe Foundation, which supports grass-roots projects aimed at reducing poverty in Africa and Tibet. So far, the foundation has distributed some $850,000. Tanzanian women have received loans to establish small businesses; exiled Tibetan nuns in Nepal have been given a grant; and in the East African Masai country, cattle herders have received help to construct corn mills. "These mills are a major asset for the cattle herders, and are often operated by women. Without the support of the Lolwe Foundation, several of them would never have been built," says Uffe Larsen, of the Danish NGO Utamaduni project.

Hoeg gives no interviews and has never commented in public on his initiative. His silence may be of concern to his publisher, who has been waiting seven years for his next book. But Hoeg is unstirred by external pressure, living anonymously with his wife and children in a Copenhagen apartment. In a world where too many boast about too little, quiet charity shouts out loud.

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

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