In this case who/whom refers to the subject of the sentence, so use 'who': "Be proud of who you are."
If the who/whom referred to the object, you would use 'whom'; "Be proud of being a person for whom honesty is important."
To distinguish between subject and object, we usually use the structure "Subject Verb Object" in English, so with the statement "Alan likes Joao.", Alan is the subject and Joao is the object. If you didn't know some information you could ask either "Who likes Joao?" or "Alan likes whom?" or even "Who likes whom?".