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・ Hanna Jubran
・ Hanna K.
・ Hanna Kaniuk
・ Hanna Karasiova
・ Hanna Karjalainen
・ Hanna Karttunen
・ Hanna Kay
・ Hanna Kisteleki
・ Hanna Knyazyeva-Minenko
・ Hanna Kokko
・ Hanna Kolb
・ Hanna Konsek
・ Hanna Kosonen
・ Hanna Krall
・ Hanna Kulenty
Hanna Kvanmo
・ Hanna Lake
・ Hanna Lewis
・ Hanna Lindberg
・ Hanna Lindblad
・ Hanna Lis
・ Hanna Ljungberg
・ Hanna Mangan-Lawrence
・ Hanna Marcussen
・ Hanna Margońska
・ Hanna Mariën
・ Hanna Marklund
・ Hanna Maron
・ Hanna Marusava
・ Hanna Mazgunova


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Hanna Kvanmo : ウィキペディア英語版
Hanna Kvanmo

Hanna Kristine Kvanmo (June 14, 1926 – June 23, 2005) was a Norwegian politician for the Socialist Left Party. She served as a Member of Parliament from 1973 to 1989, representing the county of Nordland, as the first parliamentary leader of the Socialist Left Party 1977–1989, and as a member of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, the five-member committee awarding the Nobel Peace Prize, from 1991 to 2002. From 1993 to 1998, she was the Nobel committee's vice chair. During her term on the Nobel committee, she was responsible for the decisions to award the Nobel Peace Prize to individuals such as Aung San Suu Kyi, Nelson Mandela, Yasser Arafat and Kofi Annan. By profession, she was a teacher.
==Early life==
Hanna Kvanmo grew up in extremely poor conditions in the northern Norwegian rural region of Nordland. Her father was a fisherman and her mother was a factory worker. Her parents were divorced, and she was brought up mostly by her mother.
During World War II, the German occupation of Norway offered opportunities for poor people such as Hanna, who dreamt of becoming a nurse. As an 18-year-old (in 1944), Kvanmo joined the German Red Cross as a nursing student. She was stationed for some time on the Eastern Front, and in the last days of the war, she found herself working as a practical nurse in Berlin, thus experiencing the horrendous circumstances during the bombing and fall of the city. After the German defeat, she was interned in the British sector of Germany and only returned to Norway in late 1947. In Norway, she was tried and convicted of treason on behalf of the German occupying authorities following the war. She was given an 8-month prison sentence, which was suspended after an appeal to the Supreme Court, and a ten-year suspension of her rights as a citizen. The International Committee of the Red Cross protested against Norway for the practice of convicting Norwegian nurses who worked with the German Red Cross, arguing that such convictions were in violation of the Geneva Conventions, which forbid the persecution of Red Cross personnel as a war crime. Nevertheless, any involvement with the German Red Cross society was considered an act of treason by Norwegian authorities, in contravention with international law.
Her activities during the war were often questioned later in her political career in the Socialist Left Party. In 1990 she wrote the book ''Dommen'' ("The Verdict"), where she made accounted for her reasons for joining the German Red Cross, and her experience of the treason trial. Among other things, she wrote that she experienced the conviction as such a heavy burden she considered taking her own life. The book became a national besteller in Norway, selling more than 83,000 copies.
After several years as a single mother working as a cleaning lady and cook, she married and passed the university entrance exam (examen artium) with distinction and worked as a gymnasium teacher at Rana Gymnasium from 1962 to 1973.

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