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Inside/Out
with Mary Robinson the first woman President of Ireland (1990-1997)
and former United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (1997-2002)
Kubatana.net
April 28, 2010
Full interview
with Mary Robinson - Read and listen
Describe
yourself in five words?
I am an activist.
What's
the best piece of advice you've ever received?
I've received a lot of good advice - I didn't
always take it. I think it's to develop my whole potential.
What's
the most ridiculous thing you've ever done?
I once went to a party of an American friend, disguised
in a wig and a big bosom. I got away with it for the whole evening.
What
is your most treasured possession?
This ring that my husband gave me on our fifteenth wedding
anniversary and we are now in our fortieth year. It is very old
and its a flower. If you are free you have it the other way around.
It dates from 1770; we were married in 1970. He's a very sentimental
man, my husband, I'm glad to say.
What
do you regard as the lowest depth of misery?
I think the invisibility of people who are suffering terribly,
whether they are suffering because of poverty or they are torture
victims.
Do you
have any strange hobbies?
I like walking; when I'm in Ireland I walk a lot
in the woods around my family home.
What
do you dislike most about your appearance?
My hair. I don't have good African hair; I have to
keep putting curlers in it.
What
is your greatest extravagance?
I'm not a great shopper, so my greatest extravagance is books.
Right now I'm reading a novel about the Spanish civil war.
What
have you got in your fridge?
That's my weakness. You see it's my husband
who knows more about what's in the fridge.
What
is your greatest fear?
That something terrible could happen to an immediate member
of my family. I'm a grandmother and I have four grandchildren.
Family is very precious.
What
have you got in your pockets right now?
Tissues.
What
is your favourite journey?
Going home. Crossing Ireland to County Mayo, my mood instantly
lifts. I've been outside Ireland now for five years in Geneva,
working for the United Nations, and seven years in New York. At
the end of this year I go home. I'm looking forward to that.
I have very strong local agricultural reference points, and that's
very important when you're trying to understand land issues.
Being Irish I have a particular understanding of land issues because
we had to fight the colonial power, which was Britain, and assert
our Land Rights.
Who
are your heroes in real life?
Like many people its Nelson Mandela. Being one of his Elders
I'm part of a group that he brought together. He's an
extraordinary man. Archbishop Tutu is another favourite of mine.
Also a lot of women that I'm encountering, including Nyaradzai,
I've learnt so much from her.
When
and where were you happiest?
I am happiest in my own home with my family.
What's
your biggest vice?
I would say the preoccupation with self. If somebody is
in political life, they have an ego.
What
were you like at school?
I was a tomboy with my brothers. I was very active in school;
I wanted to be involved in things.
What
are you doing next?
I am going back to Ireland and I will be creating a foundation
on Climate Justice.
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