Ebola Fighters Named Time Magazine's Person of the Year

Time magazine's Person of the Year are the Ebola Fighters. 

Time's editor Nancy Gibbs announced the pick on NBC's "Today" show on Wednesday and revealed multiple versions of the cover — each highlighting a different Ebola fighter. Those featured were Ebola survivor Dr. Kent Brantly, Dr. Jerry Brown, nurse aide and survivor Salome Karwah, MSF volunteer health promoter Ella Watson-Stryker, and ambulance team supervisor and survivor Foday Galla.

Gibbs said the magazine selected the Ebola Fighters "because this was the worst outbreak in history and while officials were in denial and very slow to respond these men and women did a hard and dangerous work of treating patients and protecting the rest of us."

Brantly, medical missions adviser for Samaritan's Purse and the first American to contract the virus, said on "Today" that being included was "just a huge honor."

"It’s fitting that we acknowledge that most Ebola fighters and certainly those who paid the highest price for their service are themselves West Africans," he said.

As the disease continues to ravage West Africa the doctors, nurses, ambulance drivers and first responders have been on the front lines working to stop the epidemic from spreading further.

"This is not simply a historic event that we’re looking back on, but its’ still happening right now," Brantly said. "Ebola fighters are not just people who did something brave and courageous, they are still in the trenches fighting that war as we speak."

"Today" viewers shared Time’s opinion, voting for the Ebola caregivers by a large margin via “likes” on "Today's" Facebook page.

Last year Pope Francis was named Time's Person of the Year for shifting the message of the Catholic Church from one of doctrine to that of service, making it the third time a Pope was featured on the list.

TIME
1988: The Endangered Earth
TIME
1989: Mikhail Gorbachev
TIME
1990: George H. W. Bush
TIME
1991: Ted Turner
TIME
1992: Bill Clinton
TIME
1993: Nelson Mandela, center-left; F.W. de Klerk, center-right; Yitzhak Rabin, left; Yasser Arafat, right.
TIME
1994: Pope John Paul II
TIME
1995: Newt Gingrich
TIME
1996: AIDS Researcher David Ho
TIME
1997: Intel chairman and CEO Andy Grove was hailed by the mag as "the person most responsible for the amazing growth in the power and innovative potential of microchips."
TIME
1998: Kenneth Starr and Bill Clinton
TIME
1999: Jeff Bezos
TIME Magazine
2000: George W. Bush
TIME
2001: Rudy Giuliani
TIME
2002: Cynthia Cooper, Coleen Rowley, and Sherron Watkins
TIME
2003: The American Soldier
TIME
2004: George W. Bush
TIME
2005: Bill Gates, Bono, and Melinda Gates
TIME
2006: Yes, you
TIME
2007: Vladimir Putin
Time Magazine
2008: Barack Obama
AP
2009: Ben Bernanke
PR NEWSWIRE
2010: Mark Zuckerberg
AP
2011: "The Protester"
AP
2012: Barack Obama
Time Magazine
2013: Pope Francis
2014: Ebola fighter Dr. Kent Brantly.
TIME Magazine
2015: Angela Merkel
TIME Magazine via AP
2016: Donald Trump
TIME Magazine
2017: The Silence Breakers
Time
2018: Jamal Khashoggi, Wa Lone, Kyaw Soe Oo, the Capital Gazette newspaper, and Maria Ressa.
Time Magazine
2019: Greta Thunberg
TIME Magazine
2020L Joe Biden and Kamala Harris
TIME Magazine
2021: Elon Musk
TIME Magazine
2022: Volodymyr Zelensky
TIME
2023: Taylor Swift

Before announcing the 2014 Person of the Year Gibbs revealed its final eight contenders on Monday. The list included Russian President Vladimir Putin, Taylor Swift, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, Apple CEO Tim Cook and Ferguson protesters.

The top pick goes to the person or a group who, according to Time editors, has had the biggest impact  on the news this year, in a positive or in a negative way.

[[285198511 , C]]

Past recipients have included President Barack Obama in 2012 and 2008, Mark Zuckerberg, Mahatma Gandhi, Adolf Hitler, Winston Churchill, John F. Kennedy, and "You."

Exit mobile version