Samdup Human Rights Advocacy Award — Canada Tibet Committee
Canada Tibet Committee  ·  Established 1987
Now Accepting Nominations

The Samdup Human Rights Advocacy Award

An annual honour recognizing one individual and one organization advancing justice, dignity, and fundamental freedoms for people facing repression.

The Award

Honouring courage, compassion, and steadfast commitment

The Canada Tibet Committee — Canada’s oldest Tibet advocacy organization — is launching the Samdup Human Rights Advocacy Award to recognize those whose work demonstrates a sustained commitment to human rights and to the people who defend them.

Presented each year to one individual and one organization, the award celebrates leadership rooted in non-violence, principled advocacy, and solidarity with communities under repression — in Canada and around the world.

Named In Honour Of

Two lives that shaped Tibet advocacy

The award carries the names of two extraordinary advocates whose careers helped build the movement for Tibet in Canada and internationally.

Co-Founder & National President

Thubten Samdup

Canada Tibet Committee, est. 1987

Thubten Samdup co-founded the Canada Tibet Committee in 1987 and served as its national president. He later served as Representative of His Holiness the Dalai Lama at the Office of Tibet in London, carrying the work he began in Canada onto the international stage.

Executive Director & Rights Advocate

Carole Samdup

Economic & social rights advocacy

Carole Samdup served as Executive Director of the Canada Tibet Committee and built a lengthy, impactful career in economic and social rights advocacy at the International Centre for Human Rights and Democratic Development.

This award carries the spirit of two extraordinary advocates whose lives remind us that human rights work is built through courage, compassion, and steadfast commitment.
Sherap Therchin Executive Director, Canada Tibet Committee
What You Should Know

Key dates & eligibility

01

Nominations Open

Submissions are accepted beginning

July 6
02

Two Recipients

One individual and one organization are honoured each year for their advocacy.

03

Presented On

International Human Rights Day — the anniversary of the day His Holiness the Dalai Lama received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1989.

December 10
Who Can Be Nominated

Nominations are open to individuals and organizations in Canada or internationally whose work demonstrates a sustained commitment to human rights, non-violence, policy advocacy, or solidarity with Tibetans and other communities facing repression.

Submit A Nomination

Put a name forward

Tell us about the person or organization you’d like to honour, and why their work reflects the spirit of this award.

Be specific about achievements and lasting impact. Roughly 200–500 words is ideal.

You may also email documents separately once your nomination is received.


Thank you for your nomination

We’ve received your submission. The Canada Tibet Committee reviews each nomination carefully, and recipients are announced ahead of the December 10 presentation.

Comité Canada Tibet
Canada’s oldest Tibet advocacy organization · Established 1987
Nomination forms, deadlines, and supporting documentation: tibet.ca
The Samdup Human Rights Advocacy Award · Presented annually on International Human Rights Day