In this photo provided by the Ukrainian Presidential Press Office and posted on Facebook, Ukrainian soldiers take a selfie with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, centre, during his visit to Kherson, Ukraine, Monday, Nov. 14, 2022.
Ukrainian Presidential Press Office via AP
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BY ANNALISE MANTZ
Each year, Time magazine gives one person or group of people the honor of appearing within the cover's signature red borders as Person of the Year. And sometimes it truly is an honor—the magazine's choice of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in 2022 celebrated his courage, empathy, and dedication to his country.
Each year's selection hasn't always reflected the person who did the most good or accomplished the most significant achievement in a given year; instead, Time's Person of the Year highlights who had the greatest influence on the world. Former Publisher P.I. Prentice explained as much in a 1945 editorial. In other words, Time's Person of the Year sometimes has more in common with a wanted poster than the Nobel Prize. Recipients who fall under this category include Adolf Hitler (1938) and Joseph Stalin (1939 and 1942).
Sometimes the Person of the Year isn't a person at all. In 1982 and 1988, inanimate objects earned recognition, with The Computer and The Endangered Earth winning for each respective year. Similarly, the magazine has featured groups of unnamed people a dozen times, including 2018's The Guardians and 2003's The American soldier. The magazine has often overlooked women for the cover: Since its inception in 1927, only five women have graced the cover alone as individual recipients.
Regardless of what each Person of the Year did to become famous, reexamining each year's choice can reveal a lot about the state of the world during that period. To gain a broad overview of the award since its inception in 1927, Stacker consulted Wikipedia's list of every Time Person of the Year. Some years have multiple winners; in 2006, the magazine began listing runners-up for the title each year. Continue reading to discover which world leaders, scientists, athletes, actors, and everyday people were awarded this notable distinction over the past 90-plus years.
When Time magazine editors first came up with the concept of the Person of the Year, the person to choose as 1927's standout individual was obvious: Charles Lindbergh. He flew solo across the Atlantic in 33 hours and 39 minutes.
Harris & Ewing // Wikimedia Commons
1928: Walter Chrysler
- Lived: 1875–1940
- Runners-up: N/A
This businessman was the founder and first president of the Chrysler Corporation, which had an outstanding year in 1928. That year, Chrysler brought the Plymouth to market, acquired the Dodge Brothers Company, and added more commercial cars to his line. Walter Chrysler also announced that he would build a skyscraper in Manhattan that year, now known as the Chrysler Building.
Unknown // Wikimedia Commons
1929: Owen D. Young
- Lived: 1874–1962
- Runners-up: N/A
This American business executive boasted a long string of accomplishments—general counsel for General Electric Company, chairman of the executive committee of the Radio Company of America, and so on—but it was his work leading the committee of experts who drafted the plan for settlement of reparations after World War I that earned him this honor.
Yann // Wikimedia Commons
1930: Mahatma Gandhi
- Lived: 1869–1948
- Runners-up: N/A
Twelve months after the Indian National Congress put the Indian Declaration of Independence into law, Time chose Mahatma Gandhi as the Person of the Year. At the time, he was being held in jail for protesting Britain's salt tax.
JLPC // Wikimedia Commons
1931: Pierre Laval
- Lived: 1883–1945
- Runners-up: N/A
This optimistic French politician became the Person of the Year in 1931, just after becoming the prime minister of France. He also gained notoriety for his international work promoting the Social Insurance Act through both of the National Assembly chambers.
Haile Selassie ruled as the emperor of Ethiopia from 1930 to 1974. He is perhaps best known for his appeal for help from the League of Nations in 1933 as Italian soldiers led by Benito Mussolini attacked his country. Selassie is credited with giving Ethiopia its first constitution and ushering Africa into the modern age.
Captain Fred L. Eldridge, Photographer / Department of Defense // Wikimedia Commons
1937: Chiang Kai-shek
- Lived: 1887–1975
- Runners-up: N/A
China's supreme leader became the Time Person of the Year in 1937. The early stages of the Sino-Japanese War and Chiang Kai-shek's desire to create national unity throughout China triggered the nomination.
The Munich Agreement led the staff of Time magazine to name the Fuhrer Adolf Hitler as the most influential person of 1938. The fact that three world powers—Britain, France, and Italy—allowed Hitler to annex Czechoslovakia's Sudetenland showed just how terrifyingly powerful he had become.
Segunda Guerra Mundial // Flickr
1939: Joseph Stalin
- Lived: 1878–1953
- Runners-up: N/A
Joseph Stalin was named Time's Person of the Year for the first time in 1939, when he signed the German-Soviet Nonaggression Pact with Adolf Hitler. This agreement paved the way for both Nazi and Soviet attacks on Poland, and the beginning of World War II.
Evening Standard // Getty Images
1940: Winston Churchill
- Lived: 1874–1965
- Runners-up: N/A
Like Stalin, British prime minister Winston Churchill also became Time's Person of the Year twice: in 1940 and 1949. His courageous leadership of the British people in wartime—including his famous "we shall fight on the beaches" and "this was their finest hour" speeches—earned him a spot in the annals of history.
Hulton Archive // Getty Images
1941: Franklin D. Roosevelt
- Lived: 1882–1945
- Runners-up: N/A
By 1941, FDR's influence had extended from the domestic sphere into international politics. As commander-in-chief, Roosevelt led the United States through several years of war, authorized American scientists to begin development of the atomic bomb, and laid the foundation for the United Nations. Time cited his work signing the Declaration of War and Lend Lease Act as the reason for naming him Person of the Year in 1941.
Hulton Archive // Getty Images
1942: Joseph Stalin
- Lived: 1878–1953
- Runners-up: N/A
In 1942, the Soviet army successfully defended the city of Stalingrad against Nazi forces in what many historians consider the greatest battle of World War II. Time honored Stalin yet again for turning what could have been a resounding defeat into the moment when the Allies began to take control of the conflict.
Even before he was elected president, Eisenhower had an impressive track record. As a four-star general, he led the Allied Forces in World War II—a feat that earned him his first Time Person of the Year nod.
Truman's Secretary of State James F. Byrnes, also played an important role in the decision to use an atomic weapon during World War II. Byrnes believed in "atomic diplomacy"—the idea that using the bomb could give the United States more leverage in post-war negotiations—and ultimately recommended its use.
Winston Churchill's second Time magazine cover wasn't as Person of the Year, but Man of the Half-Century. His role in leading Britain—and Western Europe—through World War II earned him the well-deserved attention.
Madmax32 // Wikimedia Commons
1950: The American fighting-man
- Lived: N/A
- Runners-up: N/A
Five years after the end of World War II, Time editors chose the first group of People of the Year: the American fighting man. As the magazine noted at the time, the American soldier is special because: "He fights as he lives, a part of a vast, complicated machine—but a thinking, deciding part, not an inert cog."
Bellavista // Wikimedia Comons
1951: Mohammad Mossadegh
- Lived: 1882–1967
- Runners-up: N/A
Iranian premier Mohammad Mossadegh had just taken office in 1951. His accomplishments include nationalizing British oil holdings and nearly deposing the shah.
AFP // Getty Images
1952: Elizabeth II
- Lived: 1926–
- Runners-up: N/A
Queen Elizabeth II ascended the throne on Feb. 6, 1952, after the death of her father, King George VI. Though Time editors couldn't have known it at the time, she would go on to become Britain's longest-reigning monarch.
President Eisenhower appointed John Foster Dulles as secretary of state in 1953 and the pair's close friendship helped them accomplish some extraordinary feats. Dulles is perhaps best known for his belief that peace could be maintained by containing communism.
Speaking of Khrushchev, Time magazine chose the Soviet statesman as the Person of the Year in 1957. He denounced his predecessors, reorganized the country's industry, formed an alliance with China, and even attempted to make peace with the United States.
Fifteen years after his first Person of the Year award, Eisenhower again received the honor. This time, he had already served as president of Columbia University, become president of the United States, and ended the Korean War.
Douglas Grundy/Three Lions // Getty Images
1960: U.S. Scientists
- Lived: N/A
- Runners-up: N/A
Because science moved forward so much in 1960, Time editors felt it was only appropriate to spotlight U.S. scientists overall. As the cover story noted, "1960 was the richest of all scientific years, and the years ahead must be even more fruitful."
In 1962, Pope John XXIII convened a gathering of church leaders known as Vatican II to discuss the differences between the Roman Catholic Church and the modern world. This attempt to bring his religion into the 20th century led to Time naming him Person of the Year.
National Park Service // Flickr
1963: Martin Luther King Jr.
- Lived: 1929–1968
- Runners-up: N/A
Civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. became the first African American Person of the Year in 1963—though he had already been featured on a 1957 Time cover about the Montgomery bus boycott. His meeting with President Lyndon B. Johnson, arrest in Birmingham, Ala., and other notable moments in his career were all highlighted in the feature.
Cecil W. Stoughton // Wikimedia Commons
1964: Lyndon B. Johnson
- Lived: 1908–1973
- Runners-up: N/A
After Kennedy's assassination in 1963, Lyndon B. Johnson fulfilled his constitutional responsibility and assumed the presidency. He wasted no time, quickly announcing the Great Society program that used federal money to fund a myriad of social welfare programs.
manhhai // Flickr
1965: William Westmoreland
- Lived: 1914–2005
- Runners-up: N/A
Gen. William Westmoreland commanded U.S. forces in Vietnam. His decision to wage a war of attrition led to an increasing number of American as well as Vietnamese casualties—a fact that began to turn the tide of public opinion against the war.
Four years into his presidency, Johnson again became Time's Person of the Year in 1967. Though his decision to increase military involvement in Vietnam and his less-than-charming personality didn't earn him very many fans, he undoubtedly left his mark on the country.
File Upload Bot // Wikimedia Commons
1968: The Apollo 8 astronauts
- Lived: N/A
- Runners-up: N/A
Capt. James A. Lovell, Jr., Air Force Maj. William A. Anders, and Col. Frank Borman became the first to complete a lunar flight in 1968—a feat that qualified them for Time's annual honor.
German Chancellor Willy Brandt had only just been elected in 1969, but was already gaining notoriety for his attempts to bring East and West Germany together. He eventually won the Nobel Peace Prize for his work.
Stan Meagher // Getty Images
1971: Richard Nixon
- Lived: 1913–1994
- Runners-up: N/A
In a first for Time, President Richard Nixon was named the Person of the Year twice in back-to-back years. His decision to end the Vietnam War motivated Time to choose him the first time.
Central Intelligence Agency // Flickr
1972: Henry Kissinger
- Lived: 1923–
- Runners-up: N/A
National security advisor Henry Kissinger also played a crucial role in Nixon's foreign policy, leading Time to name him one of 1972's most influential people. He took a secret trip to Beijing to pave the way for the president, negotiated the Paris peace deal that ended U.S. military involvement in Vietnam, and engineered the detente with the Soviet Union.
Time chose to spotlight the changing roles of American women in 1975. Profiles of Betty Ford, Billie Jean King, influential feminist Susan Brownmiller, and other notable women were featured in the issue.
Hulton Archive // Getty Images
1976: Jimmy Carter
- Lived: 1924–
- Runners-up: N/A
President Jimmy Carter's ambitious domestic political agenda motivated Time to choose him as the Person of the Year in 1976. He created the Department of Energy, pardoned Vietnam War draft-dodgers, streamlined federal government, and lowered federal income taxes.
Dual Freq // Wikimedia Commons
1977: Anwar Sadat
- Lived: 1918–1981
- Runners-up: N/A
Egyptian President Anwar Sadat did something unprecedented in 1977: He visited Israel. No other Arab leader had ever traveled to the country. Sadat's controversial move opened the door for peace talks between the two nations that eventually resulted in the Camp David Accords.
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini led the revolution that overthrew Mohammad Reza Pahlavi in 1979, turning Iran into a theocracy that required a strict adherence to Islamic law from its citizens. His supporters seized the U.S. embassy in Tehran on Nov. 4, 1989 and took 52 Americans hostage. The 444-day saga would become known as the Iranian hostage crisis.
Smithsonian Institution // Flickr
1980: Ronald Reagan
- Lived: 1911–2004
- Runners-up: N/A
After a successful acting career and stint as the governor of California, Ronald Reagan became president in 1980. His desire to "reassert America's prominence in the world" through economic policies led Time to name him Person of the Year for the first time.
When Time editors named the computer the Person of the Year in 1982, little did they know just how influential that technology would become. The article described the wonders that '80s-era machines could achieve, from 3-D modeling a sketch of an airplane to answering phone calls.
During one of the most tense periods of the Cold War, Leonid Brezhnev's successor Yuri Andropov spent months in negotiations over arms reductions with Reagan. The world watched the back and forth with bated breath.
U.S. Air Force // Wikimedia Commons
1984: Peter Ueberroth
- Lived: 1937–
- Runners-up: N/A
As the organizer of the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, Peter Ueberroth was directly responsible for the games' success or failure. And what a success it was—the Los Angeles Times called that year's Olympics an "unprecedented financial, athletic and aesthetic success."
Even before he became the president of the Soviet Union, Mikhail Gorbachev still exerted a huge influence over the country and the world. In particular, his policy of glasnost, or openness, gave the rest of the world hope for a more democratic and less-threatening Soviet Union.
DonkeyHotey // Flickr
1988: The Endangered Earth
- Lived: N/A
- Runners-up: N/A
Yet another non-human subject comes in 1988, when Time named Earth the Planet of the Year. The message conveyed: Mankind better clean up its collective act before carelessness destroys the planet.
Veni // Flickr
1989: Mikhail Gorbachev
- Lived: 1931–
- Runners-up: N/A
In 1989, Time named Gorbachev the Man of the Decade. By now, his impact on the Soviet Union was even clearer. As the magazine editors wrote in 1990, "he has been breaking up an old bloc to make way for a new Europe, altering the relationship of the Soviet empire with the rest of the world and changing the nature of the empire itself."
When media mogul and entrepreneur Ted Turner created CNN, the first 24-hour news channel, he changed the nature of broadcasting and the news cycle forever. Time's editors recognized the impact of CNN on media coverage around the world by naming Turner 1991's Person of the Year.
When Newt Gingrich became the speaker of the house in 1994, he ended 40 years of domination by the Democratic Party in that chamber. Though he butted heads with President Bill Clinton, Gingrich was able to pass many of the priorities from his "Contract with America" into law.
Noca2plus // Wikimedia Commons
1996: David Ho
- Lived: 1952–
- Runners-up: N/A
Dr. David Ho became Time's Person of the Year in 1996 for his incredible contributions to AIDS research, changing both the understanding and treatment of the disease immensely, and saving countless lives.
By 1998, Clinton was no longer the starry-eyed first-term president Time heralded as the Person of the Year in 1992. Paula Jones filed a civil suit alleging that Clinton had made sexual advances during his governorship, which eventually led to the discovery of a sexual relationship between Clinton and White House intern Monica Lewinsky. By the end of the year, the House of Representatives voted to impeach Clinton, though the Senate did not agree.
LUKE FRAZZA/AFP // Getty Images
1998: Ken Starr
- Lived: 1946–
- Runners-up: N/A
Clinton shared the 1998 title with Ken Starr, the independent counsel who led the investigation into the president's alleged misdeeds and released the juicy Starr Report.
KAZUHIRO NOGI/AFP // Getty Images
1999: Jeff Bezos
- Lived: 1964–
- Runners-up: N/A
If Time thought Amazon founder Jeff Bezos was influential in 1999, what must it think of him now? Bezos' vision for an online bookstore paved the way for the explosion of e-commerce, and changed the shopping landscape forever.
The U.S. National Archives // Flickr
2000: George W. Bush
- Lived: 1946–
- Runners-up: N/A
George W. Bush won the presidency in a close election fraught with controversy; hello, hanging chads and eventual recount. Even before he began his presidency, Time said the fact that Bush ran on a traditionally democratic platform was extremely notable.
Three women who pointed out wrongdoing—Sherron Watkins at Enron, Coleen Rowley at the FBI, and Cynthia Cooper at WorldCom—became the Persons of the Year in 2002. By choosing them, Time reinforced the importance of speaking up.
President Bush became the Time Person of the Year a second time in 2004, just after he won his second term. In the first four years of his presidency, Bush sent U.S. troops to invade Afghanistan after the September 11 attacks, signed the Patriot Act, and withdrew America from the 1997 Kyoto Protocol.
Kjetil Ree // Wikimedia Commons
2005: The Good Samaritans
- Lived: N/A
- Runners-up: N/A
Time gave Bono, and Bill and Melinda Gates a new nickname for its 2005 Person of the Year issue: the good Samaritans. The cover story noted that if these rock stars and billionaires with nothing to lose can use huge chunks of their fortune to do some good in the world, "no one really has a good excuse anymore for just staying on the sidelines and watching."
Josh Hallett // Flickr
2006: You
- Lived: N/A
- Runners-up: Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Hu Jintao, Kim Jong-il, James Baker
- Runners-up: Al Gore, J.K. Rowling, Hu Jintao, David Petraeus
Russian President Vladimir Putin became the Time Person of the Year in 2007, stating that he had brought his country back to "the table of world power." Whether or not the former KGB official had achieved this remarkable feat through honorable actions is another matter.
Obama White House // Flickr
2008: Barack Obama
- Lived: 1961–
- Runners-up: Henry Paulson, Nicolas Sarkozy, Sarah Palin, Zhang Yimou
- Runners-up: Stanley McChrystal, The Chinese Worker, Nancy Pelosi, Usain Bolt
Though the 2008 economic crisis was one of the most severe in recent American history, it could have been much worse—something that Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke knows firsthand. Bernanke instituted seemingly extreme financial measures to avert a worldwide economic catastrophe.
JD Lasica // Flickr
2010: Mark Zuckerberg
- Lived: 1984–
- Runners-up: The Tea Party, Hamid Karzai, Julian Assange, The Chilean Miners
It seems appropriate that Mark Zuckerberg became Time's Person of the Year in the same year that Facebook attracted its 550-millionth member. It's hard to overstate the impact of Facebook on the entire world. Just take this statistic, for instance: 1 in every 12 people on Earth had a Facebook account in 2010.
syriana2011 // Flickr
2011: The Protester
- Lived: N/A
- Runners-up: William McRaven, Ai Weiwei, Paul Ryan, Kate Middleton
- Runners-up: Bashar Assad, Jeff Bezos, Ted Cruz, Miley Cyrus, Barack Obama, Hassan Rouhani, Kathleen Sebelius, Edward Snowden, Edith Windsor
Pope Francis, or "the people's pope," took the title in 2013 for his radical approach to leading the Roman Catholic church. The Argentina-born pope came from humble beginnings—past jobs included a janitor, literature teacher, and nightclub bouncer—and harnesses his understanding of the average person to connect with his flock. Unlike some of his predecessors, Francis cares more about handing out alms, correcting injustices, and responding to those who write to him than participating in Vatican bureaucracy.
CDC Global // Flickr
2014: Ebola fighters
- Lived: N/A
- Runners-up: The Ferguson protesters, Vladimir Putin, Taylor Swift, Jack Ma, Tim Cook, Masoud Barzani, Roger Goodell
In 2014, the Ebola outbreak became an epidemic, spreading from rural African towns to crowded slums to international borders. With no cure in sight, Ebola poses a huge risk for the doctors, nurses, and medical professionals who treat its victims—and still, the Ebola fighters treated them. Time honored these extraordinary men and women as its 2014 Persons of the Year.
Philipp // Flickr
2015: Angela Merkel
- Lived: 1954–
- Runners-up: Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, Black Lives Matter activists, Caitlyn Jenner, Travis Kalanick, Vladimir Putin, Hassan Rouhani, Donald Trump
As the chancellor of Germany, Angela Merkel is not just the leader of the German people, but also the de facto leader of the European Union. In 2015—Merkel's 10th year as chancellor—she steered the region through a currency crisis and opened Germany's borders to millions of asylum-seekers. A banner year, indeed.
Gage Skidmore // Wikimedia Commons
2016: Donald Trump
- Lived: 1946–
- Runners-up: Simone Biles, Hillary Clinton, CRISPR scientists, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Nigel Farage, The Flint Whistleblowers, Beyoncé Knowles, Narendra Modi, Vladimir Putin, Mark Zuckerberg
Whether you love him or hate him, one can't deny the impact that Donald Trump had on the United States—and indeed, the world—in 2016. Few expected he would go all the way and win the presidency, so his victory came like a thunderclap on Election Night. Despite his unconventional campaign, he still managed to win the presidency.
Wolfmann // Wikimedia Commons
2017: The Silence Breakers
- Lived: N/A
- Runners-up: Donald Trump, Xi Jinping, Robert Mueller, Kim Jong-un, Colin Kaepernick, Patty Jenkins
What would come to be known as the #MeToo movement began in 2017. Ashley Judd went on the record in a New York Times article about alleged sexual harassment by movie mogul Harvey Weinstein, and suddenly, more and more women were coming forward to share their stories. And not just about Weinstein—though there were many sordid tales about his allegedly heinous behavior—but also about their bosses, colleagues, friends, and plenty of other famous men. Time recognized their bravery by naming "the silence breakers" the Persons of the Year in 2017.
YASIN AKGUL/AFP // Getty Images
2018: The Guardians
- Lived: N/A
- Runners-up: Donald Trump, Robert Mueller, The Activists, Moon Jae-in, Ryan Coogler, Meghan Markle
2018's Person of the Year went to journalists who faced persecution and death for their work. Four different covers featured the following journalists: Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi who was murdered for his criticism of the Saudi crown prince; editor of the Philippine news website Rappler Maria Ressa who was indicted for her critical coverage of the Philippine's president; Reuters journalists Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo who were both imprisoned in Myanmar while investigating a massacre of Rohingya Muslims; and the staff of Maryland newspaper The Capital whose office was attacked by a gunman who killed five of its employees. This grouping was dubbed The Guardians.
Pablo Blazquez Dominguez // Getty Images
2019: Greta Thunberg
- Lived: 2003–
- Runners-up: Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, President Donald Trump, The Hong Kong Protesters, the anonymous whistleblower who triggered the impeachment inquiry on Trump
Officially the youngest person to ever be named Time's person of the year, Greta Thunberg commands the cover much like she took charge of the climate movement in 2019. Within roughly one year, the 16 year old went from independently protesting in Sweden to globe-trotting, all with a central mission to fight for our warming planet. The climate activist has since garnered the world's attention and inspired millions of people, old and young, to march along side her. In addition to arguably bringing climate change to the forefront of people's attention, the environmental activist has also become known for her passion and holding world leaders accountable. Earlier this year, she was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. Although she didn't win, her work never needed to be validated by awards. According to NBC News, The nordic Council extended an award which she declined.
Mark Makela // Getty Images
2020: Joe Biden and Kamala Harris
- Lived: 1942-, 1964-
- Runners-up: Donald Trump, Dr. Anthony Fauci and the Front Line Health Workers, The Movement for Racial Justice
President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris became Time's Person of the Year after defeating Former President Donald Trump in the 2020 election. Their hard-fought win made Harris the first female, first Black, and first South Asian vice president.
The influence of the pandemic and the racial justice movement on the magazine's choice was evident: Time cited the fact that the Biden administration would have to shoulder the burden of the ongoing fight against COVID-19, as well as the country's reckoning around systemic racism, in an editorial.
Dimitrios Kambouris // Getty Images
2021: Elon Musk
- Lived: 1971-
- Runners-up: N/A
Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk became the Person of the Year in 2021, chosen for his status as the world's richest man and his influence on the future of electric vehicles and space travel. In September 2021, the first all-civilian crew reached orbit during a SpaceX mission called Inspiration4.
Musk also revealed that he has Asperger's syndrome when he hosted "Saturday Night Live" in May 2021. Although Musk became Time's Person of the Year before his $44-billion purchase of Twitter, it's safe to say his influence on popular culture remains strong.
Global Images Ukraine // Getty Images
2022: Volodymyr Zelensky and the Spirit of Ukraine
- Lived: 1978-
- Runners-up: Xi Jinping, the U.S. Supreme Court, Elon Musk, Liz Cheney, MacKenzie Scott, Protesters in Iran, Ron DeSantis, Janet Yellen, Gun safety advocates
Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 plunged the country into war and thrust President Volodymyr Zelensky into the spotlight. After campaigning on an anti-corruption platform, the former television actor and comedian won the presidency in 2019. When Russian forces invaded his country, Zelensky refused to leave Kyiv, showing the world that Ukraine would not give in easily.
Zelensky has also fought the war on another front: information. He broadcasts nightly speeches on social media and appeals to world leaders through video calls—ensuring that the rest of the world doesn't forget what's happening in Ukraine. Time also honored "the spirit of Ukraine"—civilians, aid workers, and others involved in the war effort—in a separate profile.