Letters from an American - December 10, 2024
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December 10, 2024. Today is Human Rights Day, celebrated internationally in honor of the
day 76 years ago, December 10, 1948, when the United Nations General Assembly announced
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, or UDHR.
In 1948, the world was still reeling from the death and destruction of World War II,
including the horrors of the Holocaust.
The Soviet Union was blockading Berlin.
Italy and France were convulsed with communist-backed labor agitation.
Greece was in the middle of a civil war.
Arabs opposed the new state of Israel.
Communists and nationalists battled in China,
and segregationists in the U.S.
were forming their own political party
to stop the government from protecting
civil rights for black Americans.
In the midst of these dangerous trends,
the member countries of the United Nations
came together to adopt a landmark document, a common standard of fundamental rights
for all human beings. The United Nations itself was only three years old.
Representatives of the 47 countries that made up the Allies in World War II, along
with the Belarusian Soviet Socialist Republic, the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist
Republic, and newly liberated Denmark and Argentina had formed the United Nations as
a key part of an international order based on rules on which nations agreed rather than
the idea that might makes right, which had twice in just over 20 years brought wars that
involved the globe.
Part of the mission of the UN was to reaffirm faith and fundamental human rights in the dignity
and worth of the human person, in the equal rights of men and women, and of nations large and small.
In early 1946, the United Nations Economic and Social Council organized a nine-person
commission on human rights to construct the mission of a permanent human rights commission.
Unlike other UN commissions, though, the selection of its members would be based not on their
national affiliations, but on their personal merit.
President Harry S. Truman had appointed Eleanor Roosevelt,
widow of former president Franklin Delano Roosevelt,
and much beloved defender of human rights
in the United States as a delegate to the United Nations.
In turn, UN Secretary General Trygve Leiv from Norway
put her on the commission to develop a plan
for the formal human rights commission.
That first commission asked Roosevelt to take the chair.
The free peoples and all of the people liberated
from slavery put in you their confidence and their hope
so that everywhere the authority of these rights,
respect of which is the essential condition
of the dignity of the person, be
respected," a U.N. official told the Commission at its first meeting on April 29, 1946.
The U.N. official noted that the Commission must figure out how to define the violation
of human rights not only internationally, but also within a nation, and must suggest
how to protect the rights of man all over the world.
If a procedure for identifying and addressing violations had existed a few years ago, he said,
the human community would have been able to stop those who started the war at the moment when they were still weak,
and the world catastrophe would have been avoided.
Drafted over the next two years, the final document began with a preamble explaining
that a UDHR was necessary because, recognition of the inherent dignity and of the equal and
inalienable rights of all members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice, and peace in the world,
and because disregard and contempt for human rights have resulted in barbarous acts which
have outraged the conscience of mankind. Because the advent of a world in which human beings shall
enjoy freedom of speech and belief and freedom freedom from fear and want, has been proclaimed
as the highest aspiration of the common people," the preamble said, human rights should be
protected by the rule of law.
The 30 articles that followed established that all human beings are born free and equal
in dignity and rights, without distinction of any kind, such as race, color, sex,
language, religion, political or other opinion,
national or social origin, property, birth or other status,
and regardless of the political, jurisdictional,
or international status of the country or territory
to which a person belongs.
Those rights included freedom from slavery, torture, degrading punishment, arbitrary arrest, exile, and arbitrary interference with privacy, family, homer correspondence,
and attacks upon honor and reputation. They included the right to equality before the law and to a fair trial,
the right to travel both within a country and outside of it,
the right to marry and to establish a family, and the right to own property.
They included the right to freedom of thought, conscience, and religion,
freedom of opinion and expression, peaceful assembly, the right
to participate in government either directly or through freely chosen representatives,
the right of equal access to public service.
After all, the UDHR noted, the authority of government rests on the will of the people,
expressed in periodic and genuine elections which shall be by universal
and equal suffrage.
They included the right to choose how and where to work, the right to equal pay for
equal work, the right to unionize, and the right to fair pay that ensures an existence
worthy of human dignity.
They included the right to a standard of living adequate for health and
well-being, including food, clothing, housing, and medical care, and necessary social services,
and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood,
old age, or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond one's control.
old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond one's control.
They included the right to free education that develops students fully and strengthens respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms.
Education shall promote understanding, tolerance and friendship among all nations,
racial or religious groups, and
shall further the activities of the United Nations for the
maintenance of peace. They included the right to participate in art and science. They included
the right to live in the sort of society in which the rights and freedoms outlined in the UDHR could
be realized. And, the document concluded, nothing in this declaration may be interpreted as implying
for any state, group, or person any right to engage in any activity or to perform any
act aimed at the destruction of any of the rights and freedoms set forth herein.
Although eight countries abstained from the UDHR, South Africa, Saudi Arabia, and six
countries from the Soviet bloc, no country voted against it, making the vote unanimous.
The declaration was not a treaty and was not legally binding.
It was a declaration of principles.
Since then, though, the UDHR has become the foundation of international human rights law.
More than 80 international treaties and declarations, along with regional human
rights conventions, domestic human rights bills, and constitutional provisions,
make up a legally binding system to protect human rights. All of the members
of the United Nations have ratified at least one of the major international human rights treaties,
and four out of five have ratified four or more.
Indeed, today is the 40th anniversary of the UN's adoption of the Convention Against Torture
and other cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment, more commonly known as the
United Nations Convention Against Torture, or UNCAT, which
follows the structure of the UDHR.
The UDHR remains aspirational, but it is a vital part of the rules-based order that restrains
leaders from human rights abuses, giving victims a language and a set of principles to condemn
mistreatment. Before 1948, that language and those principles
were unimaginable.
In a proclamation today, the White House recommitted
to upholding the equal and inalienable rights of all people.
It noted that in the US, the Biden administration
established the White House Gender Policy Council
to advance the
rights and opportunities of women and girls across domestic and foreign policy and rejoined
the United Nations Human Rights Council to highlight and address pressing human rights
concerns.
It has worked to protect the rights of LGBTQI plus people and to expand accessibility for
people with disabilities.
Crucially, the administration has also worked to stop the misuse of commercial spyware,
which has enabled human rights abuses around the world as authoritarian governments surveil
their populations, and to fight back against transnational repression targeting human rights
defenders. At the
State Department, Under Secretary of State Osrozea, Assistant Secretary of
State Daphna Rand, and Secretary of State Antony Blinken honored eight
individuals with the Human Rights Defender Award. The recipients came from
Kuwait, Bolivia, the Kyrgyz Republic, Burma, Eswatini, Ghana, Colombia, and Azerbaijan,
and defend migrant workers, LGBTQ plus individuals, women, democracy.
Their stories underlined both that the fight for human rights is universal and that it
requires courage.
One recipient's award was delivered in absentia
because he is imprisoned.
Another award was posthumous.
The recipient was murdered last year.
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Letters from an American was produced
at Soundscape Productions, Dedham, Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.