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UNESCO Inter-Generational Human Rights Conference
an article by Nancy Wrenn
Thirty-three young people from 22 countries participated
in a week-long human rights training at the University of Connecticut
from August 7-13 this summer. Selected from over 300 applicants, who
submitted mission statements and action plans for the work they wanted
to do, these men and women plunged into workshops on poverty, hunger,
health, gender issues and the environment with lively discussion. The
week culminated in a visit to the United Nations for International
Youth Day.
Dr. Amii Omara-Otunnu, UNESCO Chair in Human Rights at UConn
and Executive Director of the UConn-ANC Partnership with South Africa,
envisioned the conference with members of the Coalition of Human Rights
Organizations in New England (CHRONE), which he founded. Staff of the
UN and UConn, members of CHRONE, and other human rights activists
participated as workshop leaders.
"I was very impressed with the energy and enthusiasm these
young people expressed throughout the week," Omara-Otunnu said. "We
expect they will maintain these contacts as a support network in their
ongoing work."
Friendships developed quickly. Hina Ali, a research fellow
from the Pakistan Institute of Legislative Development in Islamabad,
wearing a beautiful maroon sari, found kinship with Sreyashi Gosh, a
Youth Coordinator for an NGO in Calcutta which is protesting violence
against women. Nadejda Mazur from Moldova, founder and board member of
Youth Helsinki Citizens’ Assembly, came with the goal of educating
children in rural areas about the dangers of trafficking. Dickson
George of Liberia, a trainer in gender-based violence with the American
Refugee Committee, wants to establish a joint monitoring team on
college campuses to help minimize human rights abuses and the spread of
HIV. Sarada Taing, a 25 year old reporter with the Cambodian Center for
Human Rights, will continue to do daily radio news programs on human
trafficking, land disputes and the environment. Maria Salas, a young
professor at the University of Costa Rica, who has taught an
award-winning micro business course to school dropouts, expressed
concern for sustainable development and gender discrimination in her
country. She found a new friend in Carolina Garcia from the Patagonia
area of Argentina, an environmental lawyer who is working with
indigenous people through the University of Buenos Aires. Theresa
Loken, a student at New York Law School, plans to create a student
organization as a division of Lawyers Without Borders.
From Prince Edward Island, Canada came Kara O’Brien of the World
Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts, and a Global Youth Speaker
at the Canadian International Development Agency meeting where she
advocated for full implementation of the Rights of the Child
Convention.
For more information about the UNESCO program at UConn, go to www.unescochair.uconn.edu.
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DISCUSSION
Question(s) related to this article:
How can this experience be shared with more young people?
As a reader, you are invited to join in the discussion of
this article based on any of the above question(s): just click on the
question, read the previous comments and add a new reply. You may also
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Thematic forum(s) in which this article is being discussed:
GLOBAL MOVEMENT FOR A CULTURE OF PEACE
Latest reader comment:
Today,
September 8, as I entered my classroom at UConn , Storrs, a UNESCO
group was moving on. This group is composed of Israeli and Palestinian
youth. I asked the leader who had sponsored the group. She answered
that it was the YMCA of Hartford. Have any readers heard more in detail
about this imortant development?
If every YMand YWCA sponsored such groups, perhaps there would be a positive, cumulative effect.
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This report was posted on August 31, 2005. The moderator is Mary Lee.
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