
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Kirsty Young's castaway this week is Aung San Suu Kyi. The programme was recorded on location in Naypyitaw, Burma in December 2012.
Now Leader of Burma's opposition party, she has dedicated her life to fighting for human rights and democracy in her homeland. A figure of world renown, she is known in Burma as simply "The Lady" and her integrity, determination and grace have provided a beacon of hope to a nation oppressed and exploited by decades of brutal military dictatorship. President Obama says she is an "icon of democracy" and Desmond Tutu calls her "a remarkable woman ... ready to work for the healing of her motherland".
Her renown has come at significant personal sacrifice: she endured nearly 20 years of house arrest and persecution, exiled from her children and apart from her British husband who died from cancer in 1999. She says "It takes courage to feel the truth, to feel one's conscience because once you do, you must engage your fundamental purpose for being alive. You can't just expect to sit idly by and have freedom handed to you."
Producer: Cathy Drysdale
Both the on-demand and the download audio of this programme are an extended edition of the original broadcast.
4.6
14181,418 ratings
Kirsty Young's castaway this week is Aung San Suu Kyi. The programme was recorded on location in Naypyitaw, Burma in December 2012.
Now Leader of Burma's opposition party, she has dedicated her life to fighting for human rights and democracy in her homeland. A figure of world renown, she is known in Burma as simply "The Lady" and her integrity, determination and grace have provided a beacon of hope to a nation oppressed and exploited by decades of brutal military dictatorship. President Obama says she is an "icon of democracy" and Desmond Tutu calls her "a remarkable woman ... ready to work for the healing of her motherland".
Her renown has come at significant personal sacrifice: she endured nearly 20 years of house arrest and persecution, exiled from her children and apart from her British husband who died from cancer in 1999. She says "It takes courage to feel the truth, to feel one's conscience because once you do, you must engage your fundamental purpose for being alive. You can't just expect to sit idly by and have freedom handed to you."
Producer: Cathy Drysdale
Both the on-demand and the download audio of this programme are an extended edition of the original broadcast.
5,408 Listeners
1,830 Listeners
397 Listeners
7,704 Listeners
1,792 Listeners
1,083 Listeners
1,948 Listeners
1,040 Listeners
51 Listeners
66 Listeners
150 Listeners
81 Listeners
812 Listeners
52 Listeners
1,311 Listeners
741 Listeners
2,989 Listeners
3,173 Listeners
616 Listeners
26 Listeners
88 Listeners
306 Listeners
53 Listeners
807 Listeners
508 Listeners