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Atlantans
Mark 60 Years of Universal Human Rights
http://www.atlantaprogressivenews.com/news/0412.html
By Matthew Cardinale
and Alice Gordon, The Atlanta Progressive News (December 11, 2008)
(APN) ATLANTA
- About 100 people gathered on Wednesday, December 10, 2008, to
commemorate the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, at the Auburn Avenue Library. The evening included
speeches, musical performances, and a keynote address by Rev. C.
T. Vivian.
The Atlanta
celebration was the culmination of dozens of events in Atlanta over
the last 60 days, including some previously covered by Atlanta Progressive
News, such
as rallies against private immigrant prisons in Georgia.
Another series
of events screenings of the film, The Visitor, by the American Civil
Liberties Union of Georgia, were exclusively covered on Atlanta
Progressive Blog.
To be sure,
events have taken place all of the country and indeed the world,
to commemorate this anniversary of global importance. However, local
activists believe the scope of the local events has been unique.
The main organizers
of the event were Drena Brown, formerly of US Human Rights Network;
Ian Fletcher, Associate Prof. of History at Georgia State University;
Dianne Mathiowetz of the International Action Center of Atlanta;
Laura Moye of Amnesty International; Azadeh Shahshahani of the ACLU
of Georgia; and Erik Voss of International Center of Atlanta [IC,
a different organization than IAC].
Over 70 local
organizations signed on as co-sponsors of the events, including
Atlanta Progressive News.
"When a
group of us came together during the summer, we had no idea that
our small first gathering would grow to such a thriving and energizing
human rights campaign," Shahshahani said in her speech.
"There
was mutual interest by a number of people to support this celebration
of the 60th anniversary of the UDHR. June 24th was the first meeting.
Then we had various other meetings," Voss told Atlanta Progressive
News.
They called
themselves Human Rights Atlanta (HRA).
Atlanta's Center
for Civil and Human Rights (CCHR), which is developing an Atlanta
museum, was planning a series of events anyway, so Human Rights
Atlanta decided to promote CCHR's events as part of the larger calendar
of events posted on the HRA website.
Some sources
told APN, however, that HRA had an internal debate about whether
to partner with CCHR, which has been criticized for its corporate
entanglement, with groups like Central Atlanta Progress, the Atlanta
Development Authority, as well as with Coca-Cola and Mayor Shirley
Franklin.
HRA also put
together two educational modules called Human Rights 101 and Human
Rights 102, which have been taught in different venues of the last
few weeks. Moye had already created the 101 component, which HRA
adopted; then Shahsahani created the 102.
"We need
to get people to use that language... the human rights framework,"
Shahshahani told APN, adding HRA was ?equipping people with the
tools to go out and demand rights from the government."
"There
are very compelling local issues that could definitely benefit from
the human rights framework... for people to see the right to food
and health care as a human right, for us as Americans to become
familiar with the rights that are delineated in the [UDHR] and start
demanding those rights from our government," Shahshahani said.
HRA sees the
UDHR as a "powerful tool to link issues of social justice,"
Shahshahani said in her speech.
Because the
UDHR is a declaration and not a treaty, it does not technically
have the force of law--similar to the difference between an Atlanta
City Council resolution and an ordinance.
Thus, Shahshahani
argues it is also important for advocates to push the US to ratify
several conventions that much of the rest of the world has signed
on to.
These include
the Convention of the Elimination of all forms of Discrimination
against Women; the Convention on Economic, Cultural, and Social
Rights; and the Convention on the Rights of the Child.
Also, the US
does not uphold three treaties it has ratified: the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the Convention against Torture,
and the Convention of the Elimination of Racial Discrimination,
Shahshahani said.
The US essentially
attached signing statements when it ratified these, preventing people
from going to court using one of the treaties as the sole basis
for a claim.
To be sure,
pushing the human rights framework is not new in Atlanta. One organization,
Atlanta Jobs with Justice, has been very consistent about framing
its advocacy efforts around public services, transportation, and
housing in terms of human rights.
Public housing
preservation advocates repeatedly also told Atlanta Housing Authority
and Atlanta City Council that housing is a human right, indeed one
listed in UDHR. Unfortunately, this did not compel either body to
cease its plans for mass evictions and demolitions.
Homeless people,
Hurricane Katrina survivors, and immigrants are just some of the
groups not receiving the rights they are entitled to under UDHR,
Shahshahani said.
CT Vivian told
Atlanta Progressive News he was excited about participating in the
events.
"What made
me do it was the need to always live this date. When we consider
human rights, one thing that is wrong with this country is that
it has never given this the proper concern," Vivian said.
"Until
we do we will never come into the 21st century. This past Administration
and people like them have fought the UN resolution and never send
people to the UN who support it. But we signed the Declaration."
"We're
here to celebrate this 60th anniversary, not really the title, but
something so deep in us, it didn't start 60 years ago. It probably
started 60,000 years ago," Vivian said in his address.
"It's just
in the last few centuries we had enough connection... we knew we
all desired the same thing. It was impossible to gain what we truly
want by what we were doing," Vivian said. "We were sending
our children off to die in the wrong struggle."
"Not until
we rebel against how we've been programmed can we have what we really
want," Vivian said.
"Sixty
years ago we came together to really express as a world community,
not simply a few radicals... It was difficult to come to a point
where the forces in the world would let us declare," Vivian
said.
"The UN
finally coming together gave us the chance to have such a declaration
of our... inner desire. It took us thousands of years to get here,"
Vivian said.
At the heart
of the declaration is the idea that "we don't know what we
could be until someone else knows what they can be," Vivian
said.
"We have
to pick out some things to work on. We don't live up to the Declaration
of Human Rights. One of the reasons in this country, we don't like
to think any declaration is greater than our Declaration of Independence,"
Vivian said.
Our rights in
the US "are outdated by the Declaration [of Human Rights],"
Vivian said.
"We are
backward. We have not come into life... for the world. As a human
family, we have a responsibility to others," Vivian said.
"When you
look the last 8 years, it was designed to wipe out everything the
Civil Rights Movement brought forward," Vivian said. "Can
you imagine how far back you go when you lie to start a war?"
"The world
is waiting for people like you and I," Vivian said.
"Once you're
in the movement... freedom... making this a better world, it never
stops. It was never about the moment we were in. It was about the
moment we were creating," Vivian said.
"It is
in the action where life really is, where you find out who you really
are. You can't talk yourself into freedom because they won't let
you," Vivian said.
About
the author:
Matthew Cardinale
is the News Editor for The Atlanta Progressive News and is reachable
is matthew@atlantaprogressivenews.com.
Alice Gordon is a Staff Writer for The Atlanta Progressive News
and is reachable is alice@atlantaprogressivenews.com.
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