Saturday 18 December 2021

International Migrants Day 2021: Harnessing the potential of human mobility


 International Migrants Day is observed on 18 December throughout the world, and aims to raise awareness about the challenges and difficulties faced by people on the move, as well as their contributions to their communities and to their host countries.
The United Nations General Assembly in the year 1999 created the International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of their Families.
But on December 04, 2000, keeping an account of the large and increasing migrants across the globe, December 18 was decided as International Migrants’ Day.
Later, based on the previous concerns on December 14 and 15, 2006, 132 member states shared a high-level dialogue on the migration issues proposed by the General Assembly.
International Migrants Day was created to commemorate the importance of strengthening international cooperation and migration bilaterally, regionally, and globally.
The theme for the year 2021 is ‘Harnessing the potential of human mobility’.Migrants contribute with their knowledge, networks, and skills to build stronger, more resilient communities. The global social and economic landscape can be shaped through impactful decisions to address the challenges and opportunities presented by global mobility and people on the move.
Migration is a global phenomenon where a wide range of factors determine the movement of people which can either be voluntary or forced movements because of disasters, economic challenges and extreme poverty or conflict. Hope and aspiration for dignity, safety and peace often prompt people to leave their homes in search of a better life. Approximately 281 million people were international migrants in 2020, representing 3.6 per cent of the global population.
All these will significantly affect the characteristics and scale of migration in the future, and determine the strategies and policies countries must develop in order to harness the potential of migration while ensuring the fundamental human rights of migrants are protected. 
 In a message just ahead of International Migrants Day,  the United Nations Secretary-General  Antonio Guterres has said that expressing solidarity with migrants on the move, “has never been more urgent.”
 Today, more people than ever live in a country other than the one where they were born. While many individuals migrate out of choice, many others leave home out of necessity.
 So far, since the beginning of this year, at least 1,340 people have lost their life in the Mediterranean Sea. This is the worst figure since 2017. It is an endless tragedy.
In his message, António Guterres said those on the move “continue to face widespread stigmatization, inequalities, xenophobia, and racism.”
“Migrant women and girls face heightened risk of gender-based violence and have fewer options to seek support”, he added.
With borders closed because of the pandemic, Mr. Guterres remembered that many migrants are stranded without income or shelter, unable to return home, separated from their families, and facing an uncertain future.
“Yet throughout the pandemic, migrants have enriched societies everywhere and are often on the frontlines of the pandemic response, as scientists, healthcare professionals and essential workers”, he said.
For the UN chief, the world needs more effective international cooperation and a more compassionate approach to accomplish that goal.
“This means managing borders humanely, fully respecting the human rights and humanitarian needs of everyone and ensuring that migrants are included in national COVID-19 vaccination plans”, he explained.
It also means recognizing pathways for regular entry and addressing the drivers of migration, such as deep inequalities and human trafficking.
Next year, the International Migration Review Forum will take stock of progress in implementing the milestone Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration.
For the UN chief, this “is an opportunity to advance efforts to ensure the full inclusion of migrants as we seek to build more resilient, just and sustainable societies.”
Mr. Guterres also welcomed the pledging campaign launched by the United Nations Migration Network to strengthen the Global Compact and encourage Member States and others to get involved.
This year, International Migrants Day falls almost exactly 70 years since the historic Brussels conference that led to the establishment of the International Organization for Migration (IOM).
 The International Organization for Migration (IOM) has assisted millions of migrants since it emerged 70 years ago to assist the vast number of Europeans displaced by the Second World War and continues to lead the way in promoting a humane and orderly management of migration for the benefit of all, including the communities of origin, transit and destination.
In his message, IOM Director General, António Vitorino, recalled the stark images of closed borders and separated families, amidst COVID-driven economic disarray, that have become more common in recent years.
According to him, the global pandemic has also spawned a new wave of anti-migrant sentiment and the increasing instrumentalization of migrants as political pawns.
“Both are unacceptable”, Mr. Vitorino said.
For him, the response to the pandemic has also underlined the importance of migrant workers in keeping everyone safe.
“The positive social and economic impact in the countries where they reside, and the $540 billion remitted last year to communities in lower and middle-income countries, are measures of the industry, entrepreneurship and community from which we all benefit”, he explained.
 
 

 
The IOM chief argued that, in order to realize the full potential of human mobility, two things must happen.
First, governments must move from words to action and include migrants regardless of their legal status, in their social and economic recovery plans.
Second, they must reinforce legal channels for migration that respect national sovereignty and the human rights of people on the move.
“A comprehensive approach requires that we leave aside the defensive posturing that too often victimizes people along their migratory journeys”, Mr. Vitorino said.
For Audrey Azoulay, Director-General of UNESCO, the need to stop the circulation of the virus should not jeopardize access to a better life.
She remembered that the factors leading to forced migration are becoming more pronounced, with increased conflict, growing food insecurity and the climate emergency.
Ms. Azoulay pointed to a report  published in November by the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) showing that the number of forced displacements had doubled in ten years. For her, this shows “how urgent it is to take action to protect these vulnerable populations.”
Stressing that these people are “often” victims of discrimination and racism, she said UNESCO was developing a new approach, following the Global Call against Racism  launched by Member States last year.
Ms. Azoulay also highlighted the findings of a UNESCO report, Migration, Displacement and Education: Building Bridges, Not Walls, saying that education is “often the first step towards other, more stable horizons.”
All over the world, millions of migrants, including women and children, continue to be detained because of their status.
In a statement released on Friday, independent human rights experts urged Member States to ultimately end this practice, and to immediately stop detaining migrant children.
“People should not be treated as criminals merely for irregular crossing a State border or lacking proper documentation. Mass detention of these people cannot be considered as just a casual measure of immigration control”, they said.  
According to the experts, there has been a significant increase in the use of immigration detention since the 1990s, although it is forbidden by international law.
Detention has a significant impact on the health and personal integrity of migrants, including on their mental health, including anxiety, depression, exclusion and post-traumatic stress disorder, and even risk of suicide.
Special Rapporteurs and independent experts are appointed by the Geneva-based UN Human Rights Council to examine and report back on a specific human rights theme or a country situation. The positions are honorary and the experts are not paid for their work.
On the occasion of International Migrants Day, we should  call on policymakers to facilitate human mobility instead of treating migrants as a threat or weapons. People on the move are human beings, crossing borders for different reasons – to seek protection, work, study, reunite with family members, among others.
Migrants and those defending their rights are facing a particularly challenging moment in Europe, where policies of panic and reject dominate and too often kill. Fatal shipwrecks in the English Channel and the Mediterranean Sea, people used as pawns at the border with Belarus and left dying in frozen woods at the EU’s doorstep, countless pushbacks and refoulement in Greece and along the Balkan route are just a few examples.
 We must continue to provide a vibrant welcome to refugees among us, and to encourage our country to respond to the world's crisis by offering hospitality to vulnerable refugees now more than ever.
Women, men and children around the world are fleeing war, persecution and torture.They have been forced into the hands of smugglers and onto dangerous journeys across the sea in rickety old boats and dinghies. Many have lost their lives. Those who have made it often find themselves stranded in makeshift camps in train stations, ports or by the roadside. And still, politicians across Europe fail to provide safe and legal routes for people to seek asylum.
Meanwhile though ordinary people have responded with extraordinary displays of humanity and generosity. They've been moved to act after seeing thousands of people drowning in the Mediterranean, the continuing misery of camps in places like Calais, and images of the brutal conflicts across the world. 
People however are still dying in  numbers in the Mediterranean, on the way to Europe and its borders. In Calais the population of the slum is over 10,000 people in more and more appalling living conditions, thousands trapped in Greece without running water or baby formula. Here as elsewhere in Europe, the situation gets worse day by day for migrants, showing the ineffectiveness and the murderous character of current policies combined  with.the continuing the injustices and inefficiencies of Britain's own asylum system.
The  UK government should be leading  the way towards a more human global response to the millions fleeing conflict. and do more to help refugees in the UK rebuild their lives  People have always crossed borders, be it to find peace, love or better opportunities, and this will not stop, regardless of how high the fences are. We meed a drastic shift of migration policies:, safe regular pathways to Europe rather than higher walls and militarised borders.
The appalling treatment of refugees across Europe and the staggering rise in anti-Muslim hate crimes must be challenged too. Let’s send a message that drives back the tide of racism, fascism, Islamophobia, and the scapegoating of migrants and refugees  and continue to loudly say refugees are welcome here.
In the meantime  you could find your local migrant and refugee community organisation and if you can, donate to their work.You can support the Migrants Organise Winter Solidarity Appeal here: It's members—migrants and refugees trapped in a hostile immigration system—are facing destitution, isolation & increasing hostility. There casework team is working with 500+ people & their families and are building a Solidarity Fund to provide essential items for its members including essential clothes, food and educational items for children. Find out more and support.

Friday 17 December 2021

William S. Burroughs - The Junky's Christmas.

 

  In 1989, the iconic Beat writer William S. Burroughs created The Junky's Christmas, a short story that originally appeared in the collection Interzone and in the 1993 recording Sparse Ass Annie and Other Tales.
Following  Burroughs’  reading on that occasion , it was adapted into  a film from the same year (directed by Nick Donkin and Melodie McDaniel and produced by the great Francis Ford Coppola), essentially claymation, but Burroughs appears in live-action footage and the beginning (with a book – those haunting facial close-ups!) and at the “banquet scene” at the end. It’s a small masterpiece read.brilliantly by a genius writer that I watch evety year around this time.
 “The Junky’s Christmas” begins with William Burroughs, seated by a Christmas tree and fireplace, who takes down a book and with his unmistakeable voice reads us the sad story of Danny the Carwiper, a heroin addicted hustler who spends Christmas Day trying to score a fix, but finds the Christmas spirit instead and discovers his last remains of selflessness and humanity despite his urgent physical predicament..
The black-and-white live action gives way to beautiful animation, showing junk-sick Danny trying to break into a car. If you tend to associate claymation with goofy features for kids, you quickly realize you’re in a different element with this film. The earthiness of the materials perfectly conveys the grit of the story. By the time Danny gives away his hard-earned shot to a stranger suffering from kidney stones, blunting the “algebra of need” with an unanticipated act of altruism.,
Christmas can be a bit of a downer and a dark time for many of us, but in this moving and magical  piece of work  Burroughs not only alludes to the festive period in a way that  only this Beat bastion could, but also showcases the beating soul of his artistry. A timeless film that needs to be preserved and watched by future generations. Remember that tragically there are literally hundreds of people living this story  right now. Watch and enjoy, then go dry your tears.
Merry Christmas / Nadolig lawen!

Tuesday 14 December 2021

Musical Highlights: 2021


  Eleven years of the Tories, Jesus Christ, is it any wonder, we're all poor depressed  on top of the pandemic, that  continues to impact our lives. Despite all the strangeness music  at least has continually arrived to give much needed respite.Music acting as a lifeline.helping many of us cope with the stress of the pandemic, whilst having a positive impact on our lives,.It felt like every other week was a wave of new records being released, of genuine emotion and depth, dark, joyful, heartbreaking and celebratory, a reminder of the pull and power of music.
The year saw the release of albums featuring new directions that artists devised during the lockdowns as well as albums postponed from their 2020 release due to COVID-19. Proper live music of course remained very thin on the ground, let's hope things gradually improve, guess for now we just have to remain ever cautious.
.To all those who’ve struggled  or lost sleep not knowing how they would be able to protect and care for their loved ones in these uncertain times, I sincerely  hope  music has at least comforted your life as much as mine.Despite the lack of gigs music consumption has remained robust.
Bandcamp by the way, an artist-focussed platform that allows people to support their favorite musicians and labels continues to support musicians  and artists who have been hit especially hard .Lets  continue to try and support those that continue to enrich our lives.  Every day is a good day to directly support artists on Bandcamp!” Fuck Amazon.
Seasons greetings, and much love, stay safe, stay alert. heddwch/peace. As Boris Johnson remains in a deep hole, let's hope more stable days arrive soon for the rest of us.The following in no particular order are some of my musical highlights that have guided me through another strange  year. Included are a smattering of reissues.
1.Afro Cluster - The Reach

2. Nick Cave and Warren Ellis - Carnage

3.Sleaford Mods - Spare Ribs


4.Idles- Crawler


5.Manic Street Preachers -  Ultra Vivid Lament

6.Datblygu - Cwm Gwagle

7.Gruff Rhys - Seeking New Gods

8.Superfjord - For The Moment Volume 1

 

9.Sendelica - And Man Created God


10.Matt Berry - The Blue Elephant



11,Sons of Kemet- Black to the future


12.Floating Points, Pharoah Sanders  and the London Symphony Orchestra - Promises


 13.Tibetan  Miracle Seeds - Inca Missiles  


 14. Bob Vylan -We  Live Here


15.Sadder Bazaar - Seventh Valley

 

16. Shining Tonques - Milk of God


17.Andrew Lile's - It's Only Pain


18.Nathan Hall  and the Sinister locals - Pointing Paw

19. Andy T - Clinging onto Sanity with a Broken Fingernail

20.Richard Dawson  & Circle - Henki


 21.  John Coltrane - Love Supreme, Live in Seattle


22.Leslie Winer - When I Hit  You, You'll Feel It 


23.Arthur Russell - Another Thought


24. Nik Turner- I Do What I like


25. Marianne Faithful - She Walks in Beauty

 


                       

Monday 13 December 2021

Christian Johann Heinrich Heine (13/12/1797 – 17/2/1856) - That was but a prelude; where they burn books, they will ultimately burn people as well.

 

Christian Johann Heinrich Heine, one of the most significant German poets of the 19th century was born on December 13, 1797, He was also a renowned journalist, essayist, and literary critic, but is best known for his wonderful lyric poetry, while his radical political views led to many of his works being banned by German authorities
Heine lived during the high watermark of German Romanticism,the idyllic, idealistic days of Schiller and Goethe,but Heine was only a half-hearted Romantic. Having suffered persecution first hand as a German Jew, Heine was far too disillusioned by the injustices of the world to fully take up the hopeful, sentimental spirit of Romanticism. Although he dabbled in utopian philosophy for a brief time,  Heine always kept his distance from the Romantic humanistic idealism of his age. He was one of the more cynical poets of the early nineteenth century, and for this reason he is perhaps one of the wisest; his poetry avoids the high flights of fancy that so marred later Romanticism, and his opinions, though harsh and often pessimistic, come as a breath of fresh air in the poetic universe of unrealistic Romantic humanism.
Heine was Heinrich Heine was born  in Düsseldorf, Rhineland, as the eldest of four children into a Jewish family in a time when antisemitic sentiments were rife among the yet-to-be unified German kingdoms.. His father Samson Heine was a textile merchant, his mother Peira van Geldern was the daughter of a physician. He was called “Harry” as a child, but became “Heinrich” after his conversion to Christianity in 1825.
 Heine's parents were not particularly devout Jews. When he was a young child they sent him to a Jewish school where he learned a smattering of Hebrew. Thereafter he attended Catholic schools. Here he learned French, which would be his second language, although he always spoke it with a German accent. He also acquired a lifelong love for Rhineland folklore.
When his father's business failed, Heine was sent to Hamburg, where his uncle Salomon encouraged him to undertake a career in commerce. Salomon Heine was famous in his own right as a multi-millionaire and one of the must successful businessmen in German history to that point; Salomon encouraged his young nephew to follow in his footsteps and take up a career in banking. Heine, however, failed miserably as a businessman, and, with his uncle's financial support, he turned to the study of law at the universities of Göttingen, Bonn and Berlin. Heine quickly discovered that he was more interested in literature than in the law, nonetheless earning a law degree in 1825. During his time at university he also decided to convert from Judaism to Protestantism. Heine believed that this was necessary because of the severe restrictions on Jews in almost all of Germany; in many cases, Jews were forbidden to enter certain professions or live in certain regions, and antisemitic persecution was experienced every day. Particularly problematic for Heine, Jews were forbidden to lecture at universities, so Heine, who dreamed of one day becoming a professor, saw no choice but to abandon his religion. As Heine said in self-justification, his conversion was "the ticket of admission into European culture." For much of the rest of his life Heine wrestled over the incompatible elements of his German and his Jewish identities.
In the late 18th century Heine’s birthplace, Dusseldorf in particular and the Rhineland in general, was occupied by France. The Jews of the Rhineland were emancipated, with Karl Marx’s father and Heine among them, and were free to attend university and even to practice law or medicine. When the area was annexed to Prussia in 1815, thus far emancipated Jews were given the choice to convert to Christianity and hold on to their profession, or to keep their faith and lose their position. The backlash of this “choice” was that it radicalized the intellectuals, sowing the seeds of future revolutionaries and communists.
With German nationalism, anti-Semitism grew in the early 19th century. Mostly forgotten Kantian philosopher Jakob Friedrich Fries even called for legislation against Jews. Jews were so marginalized at the time, they were basically invisible The sentiment of physical exclusion of Jews had been present before the German unification of 1870, although it was the most "Jewish-friendly" country for a short while.
In 1817, two years after the German nationalists' victory over Napoleonic France and on the 300th anniversary of Luther’s 95 Theses, the student fraternities (Burschenschaften) organized a pilgrimage to Wartburg, a center of German nationalism where Luther found sanctuary after his excommunication. At the Wartburg Festival, students declared their universities wouldn’t accept any foreign students - foreign meaning French or Jewish. The only exception was the University of Heidelberg, whose fraternity was labeled the “Juden” fraternity from then on. Nationalistic, pro-unity speeches were given by students and academics, and books whose authors antagonized German unification were burned. The first book to be thrown onto the bonfire was written by a Frenchman and carried the title “Civil.” Few believed it could happen in the twentieth century until May 6, 1933. That day, the German Student Association announced a nationwide “Action against the Un-German Spirit.”
During his college years Heine fell hopelessly in love with two of his uncle's daughters, Amalie and Therese, both of whom rebuffed his advances and ridiculed Heine over his financial failures. Heine was heartbroken by these incidents, but he poured his emotions into his poetry, creating what is perhaps the most memorable of his works, Die Buch der Lieder (The Book of Songs). This early volume, consisting primarily of love poems dedicated to Amalie and Therese, is most certainly written in the tormented mode of German Romanticism, similar in style to the works  of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe  and Freidrich Schiller. Heine, however, brings a unique element to his love poetry: his poems, far from being sentimental, are bittersweet and self-doubting. The poet frequently questions whether his feelings are, after all, as powerful as he thinks they are, or worth the effort he has invested. In so doing Heine proves himself to be a much more honest and human poet than any of his contemporaries, as well as much easier for modern audiences to digest. For these reasons Heine has often been labeled the first "post-Romantic" poet, as he was one of the first poets of the nineteenth century to openly cast doubt on the values of Romanticism. In particular, Heine's poetry would constantly question the divide between "poesy" and "reality"—that is, the divide between the flighty world of the artistic imagination, and the material world.
In 1824, while still at Gottingen, Heine took a break from his law studies to travel in the Harz Mountains. While on his travels Heine wrote a short book about his experiences, freely mixing in imaginative fancy and social commentary with his loving descriptions of nature and the mountainsides; Der Harzreise (The Harz Journey) became the first in a series of travel books that would earn Heine a modicum of critical acclaim, the first stepping stones in the development of his literary celebrity. In addition to the book on the Harz, Heine would write additional travelogues for a trip to England, in 1827, and a journey to Italy undertaken in 1828. The most popular of all Heine's Reisebucher, however, would be the last volume, entitled Ideen. Das Buch Le Grand (Ideas. The Book Le Grand), in which Heine would take a whimsical "journey" into his own self. The book, a curiously lyrical melange of memoir, meditation, and journalistic commentary, would prove to be one of Heine's most popular.Following the July Revolution of 1830, Heine left Germany for  Paris, France in 1831. Heine was particularly attracted to Paris because of the pseudo-religion of the socialist philosopher, Count .Saint-Simon. Saint-Simon hoped to organize a utopian state, in which the State owned all property, and everyone would be rewarded based on the quality and amount of their work. Heine was attracted to this utopian vision, believing that it might at last bring an end to the long history of persecution and injustice which he saw as having tarnished all of human history. In Paris, he  began his second phase of life and work. The French capital inspired Heine to a veritable flood of essays, political articles, polemics, memoirs, poems and prose. Heine increasingly took on the role of an intellectual mediator between Germany and France and for the first time presented his position in a pan-European framework. He acquainted the French public with German Romanticism and German philosophy
Later, as it began to dawn on Heine that he would never return to Germany again, he began to write a series of works of cultural criticism, this time in French, critiquing German culture and particularly chastising what he viewed as the failed movement of  Romanticism.
 As the towering figure of the revolutionary literary movement Young Germany (Junges Deutschland), he continued from Paris to disseminate French revolutionary ideas in Germany.
Censorship of the time had a funny rule that books under 320 pages were to be reviewed before publication. Anything larger was considered to be uninteresting to the general public and not worth the censors’ time.
Heine’s publisher flouted this law by printing his clients’ work in large font, increasing the page count and bypassing the censors, but still spreading revolutionary texts. 1834 saw an end to this loophole, and as Heine refused to be censored, his work went unpublished in Germany. In 1835 the German Parliament banned the works of Young Germany and thus, Heine’s book were also banned. Heine enjoyed life in the French capital and made contact with the greats of European cultural life living there, such as Hector Berlioz, Ludwig Börne, Frédéric Chopin, George Sand, Alexandre Dumas and Alexander von Humboldt. Gradually it became a matter of course that German authors of distinction as visitors to Paris also visited Heine.
 One event which really galvanised him was the 1840 Damascus Affair in which Jews in Damascus had been subject to blood libel and accused of murdering an old Catholic monk. This led to a wave of anti-Semitic persecution. The French government, aiming at imperialism in the Middle East and not wanting to offend the Catholic party, had failed to condemn the outrage. On the other hand, the Austrian consul in Damascus had assiduously exposed the blood libel as a fraud. For Heine, this was a reversal of values: reactionary Austria standing up for the Jews while revolutionary France temporised. Heine responded by dusting off and publishing his unfinished novel about the persecution of Jews in the Middle Ages, Der Rabbi von Bacherach (The Rabbi of Bacherach).
 
 “Great genius takes shape by contact with another great genius, but less by assimilation than by friction.”

— Heinrich Heine

In October 1843, Heine’s distant relative and German revolutionary, Karl Marx, and his wife Jenny von Westphalen arrived in Paris after the Prussian government had suppressed Marx’s radical newspaper. The Marx family settled in Rue Vaneau. Marx was an admirer of Heine and his early writings show Heine’s influence. In December Heine met the Marxes and got on well with them. He published several poems, including Die schlesischen Weber (The Silesian Weavers), in Marx’s new journal Vorwärts (“Forwards“). Ultimately Heine’s ideas of revolution through sensual emancipation and Marx’s scientific socialism were incompatible, but both writers shared the same negativity and lack of faith in the bourgeoisie.
Despite his isolation in France, Heine continued to comment on the evolution of German culture. Plagued by criticism and censorship, Heine didn’t make life any easier for himself. He regularly involved himself in liberal factions at the universities he attended, held questionable and unrequited romances, and challenged 10 different people to duels throughout the years.
Though regarded as a literary celebrity, his exile in Paris was also fraught with dissidence within the Young Germany group, exacerbated once again by Heine’s tendency towards provocation, culminating in his last duel in 1840, which he survived.
Following a visit to Germany in 1843, Heine wrote a long satirical poem Deutschland. Ein Wintermärchen (Germany. A Winter's Tale), an account of his visit and a harsh lampooning of the political culture of the German people. Disillusioned with Saint-Simonism and utopanism in general for some time, Heine also satirized utopian politics with another long satirical poem entitled Atta Troll: Ein Sommernachtstraum ("Atta Troll: A Midsummer Night's Dream"), published in 1847.
In 1844, he published a second volume of poems, Neue Gedichte (New Poems) that illustrated the poet's disillusionment with Romantic ideology. The volume contains a sequence entitled "Verschiedene" that is a satirical, grotesque version of his earlier love poetry; the "Verschiedene" poems describe the poet's bitter feelings and resentment towards a litany of fickle French girls of loose morals and little devotion. The "Verschiedene" poems earned Heine a significant degree of scorn, though they are now recognized as a comic masterpiece that signaled the end of Romanticism. Neue Gedichte also contained a number of satirical poems written on political topics, meant to illustrate the need for social reform.
Heine's early years in Paris had been happy ones. the French proved to be a much more tolerant people than the Germans, and Heine enjoyed a relatively high-class life as a literary celebrity. He was married, happily, it seems, to a woman of low birth in 1841. Heine's constant attacks on German culture and politics, however, had not come without a price; by 1835 his works were banned by the German government; and by 1840 Heine himself was barred from returning to the country. Heine wrote movingly of the experience of exile in his poem In der Fremde ("Abroad"): 
 
Ich hatte einst ein schönes Vaterland.
Der Eichenbaum
Wuchs dort so hoch, die Veilchen nickten sanft.
Es war ein Traum.
Das küßte mich auf deutsch, und sprach auf deutsch
(Man glaubt es kaum,
Wie gut es klang) das Wort: »Ich liebe dich!«
Es war ein Traum.
Oh, once I had a lovely fatherland.
The oaks grew tall
Up to the sky, the gentle violets swayed.
I dreamt it all.
I felt a German kiss, heard German words
(Hard to recall
How good they rang) - the words "Ich liebe dich!"
I dreamt it all.

(Translation by Hal Draper) 

In 1844, Heine's uncle Salomon died at last, leaving the poet destitute and at a loss for stability. His uncle, who had reluctantly supported his poet-nephew during his life, had completely disinherited him from his will; penniless, and having no other options, Heine entered into a lengthy legal battle with his uncle's estate, a fight which would drain much of the poet's energy as well as seriously tarnish his reputation among his peers. Moreover, around this time, Heine began to suffer from the symptoms of a nervous disease, possibly multiple sclerosis or syphilis. Confined to bed in 1848, Heine, blind, paralyzed, and in constant pain, returned to poetry, writing some of the bleakest and most heartbreaking verses ever rendered in the German language. These poems were collected in the volumes Romanzero in 1851, and Gedichte 1853 und 1854 (Poems: 1853 and 1854), and they are now considered by critics to be his greatest achievements. Here, for instance, is Heine's heartrending "The Mad Carnival of Loving," translated by Richard Garnett:

This mad carnival of loving,
This wild orgy of the flesh,
Ends at last and we two, sobered,
Look at one another, yawning.
Emptied the inflaming cup
That was filled with sensuous potions,
Foaming, almost running over—
Emptied is the flaming cup.
All the violins are silent
That impelled our feet to dancing,
To the giddy dance of passion—
Silent are the violins.
All the lanterns now are darkened
That once poured their streaming brilliance
On the masquerades and murmurs—
Darkened now are all the lanterns.
He would not leave what he called his “mattress-grave” (Matratzengruft) until his death  on February 17, 1856 in Paris. Three days later he was buried in the Montmartre cemetery. Cimeterie. His wife Mathilde survived him, dying in 1883. The couple had no children. 85 years later in 1941 when France was under Nazi occupation, Hitler ordered the German  army to obiterate Heine's grave. No trace of it remains
 Heine is often labeled the first of the "post-Romantic" poets. His criticisms of Romanticism, which became more and more scathing as the poet matured, would help to precipitate the realist  phase of literary history. .
Many composers have set Heine's works to music. They include Robert Schumann (especially his Lieder cycle Dichterliebe), Friedrich Silcher (who wrote a popular setting of "Die Lorelei", one of Heine's best known poems), Franz Schubert, Felix Mendelssohn, Fanny Mendelssohn, Johannes Brahms, Hugo Wolf, Richard Strauss, Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Edward MacDowell, and Richard Wagner; and in the 20th century Hans Werner Henze, Carl Orff, Lord Berners, Paul Lincke, Yehezkel Braun, and Friedrich Baumfelder (who wrote another setting of "Die Lorelei", as well as "Die blauen Frühlingsaugen" and "Wir wuchsen in demselben Thal" in his Zwei Lieder).
Heine's insight into the human condition, and his constant search for real hope and change, make him one of the most moving and influential poets in the European tradition. His conversion to Christianity and attempted assimilation into German Christian culture, only to be scorned and reviled by Nazi hatred of Jews makes Heinrich a pure case and embodiment of one of the enduring horrors and tragedies in European history, namely the Christian abuse and inhuman oppression of its Jewry.
Banned by the German authorities during his own lifetime, Heine’s works faced backlash again when they were posthumously banned by the Nazis in the 1930s. Censorship went beyond bans and up in flames, when in 1933 Nazi students and youth began a nationwide book burning in Berlin as part of a nationwide action “against the un-German spirit”.
The librarian Wolfgang Hermann was instrumental in drawing up the blacklist of books to be burnt, which was published in Börsenblatt, the trade magazine for the German publishing industrywhich were then used to plunder private bookshelves, public libraries and academic collections. . More than 2,500 authors were consigned to the flames.. Among the famous German-speaking authors were Bertolt Brecht, Albert Einstein, Sigmund Freud, Heinrich Heine, Franz Kafka, Karl Marx and Stefan Zweig. The list included authors such as the 1929 Nobel Prize winner Thomas Mann, targeted for his support of the Weimar Republic, and international best-selling author Erich Maria Remarque whose “All Quiet on the Western Front” was vilified as a betrayal of the martyred soldiers of the First World War. 
 Before the books were burnt, the organisers sent out what they called their “Twelve Theses”, which were to be read at the book-burnings in every town.  The first works attacked were those of Marx. His cousin’s would soon follow suit. Never mind an author’s actual political leanings or literay message, under the Nazi regime, Jewish authors were all censored, “regardless of subject matter.
 It wasn’t only German-speaking authors whose books were burned, but also American writers like Ernest Hemingway and Jack London, French writers like Victor Hugo and André Gide, English writers like D.H. Lawrence and H.G. Wells and Russian writers like Leo Tolstoy and Fyodor Dostoyevsky.
The Nazi student leader Herbert Gutjahr held a contemptuous speech. "We have turned our actions against the un-German spirit. I turn everything un-German over to the fire," he cried.The seething bonfire below him was already swallowing up thousands of books as the 23-year-old threw another handful of volumes into the flames.
Scenes like this one played out all over Germany on May 10, 1933. In the cities with major universities, students burned works by authors who didn't uphold their racist ideology. Students had already spent weeks lugging condemned manuscripts out of the libraries.
In their eyes, the books contained "un-German" thoughts, or their authors were considered enemies of National Socialism. Most of the authors were socialists, pacifists or Jews.
The students didn't have to fear resistance: Library employees and many professors went along with the emptying of their collections, even if they didn't all agree with it.
After the Nazis took power in January 1933, Adolf Hitler received dictatorial authority. That marked the beginning of his campaign to win the minds of Germans. The German Student Union, an umbrella group for all student organizations, announced in April 1933: "The state has been conquered! But not yet the universities! The intellectual paramilitaries are coming in. Raise your flags!"
With hardly any involvement from the Nazi party, the Nazi student organization took the lead and culminated their campaign with the book burnings on May 10.
The central book burning event took place at the Opernplatz in Berlin and was broadcast live on the radio. Many students arrived dressed in the SS or SA uniforms worn by the Nazis' paramilitary groups. A number of professors turned out as well.
Selected students threw books into the fire again and again as ideological proclamations were shouted into the crowd. One of the statements was: "Against decadence and moral decay! For breeding and convention in the family and state! I turn writings by Heinrich Mann, Ernst Glaeser and Erich Kästner over to the fire!"
Erich Kästner, the author of internationally renowned children's books including "Emil and the Detectives" (1929), was present that night at the Opernplatz and bore witness to the hideous spectacle Later he described this dark day with the word “Begräbniswetter” (funeral weather)."I stood in front of the university, wedged between students in SA uniforms, in the prime of their lives, and saw our books flying into the quivering flames," Kästner wrote. He concluded: "It was disgusting." It rained so hard that the flames kept going out, and the fire brigade had to pour petrol on the fire to get it burning properly.The majority of Germans, including many uncritical intellectuals and professors, quietly stood by as their country's creative talent went up in flames. Some even approved. Most troubling, however, is the key role students played in ideologically shaping the country.
The main speaker arrived at midnight. Joseph Goebbels, the Nazi propaganda minister with a PhD in Germanic studies, spoke to the Berlin crowd and the short-wave listeners at home. "German men and women! The age of excessive Jewish intellectualism has come to an end, and the breakthrough of the German revolution has cleared the path for the German way."
Goebbels belied how much he mistrusted the students' self-organized campaign; at that point, he and Hitler were afraid of losing their grip on the Nazi movement.
Ominously, a character in Heine’s play Almansor (1821) a tragic love story between an Arab man and Donna Clara, a Moroccan woman who’s forced to convert from Islam to Christianity. Taking place in Granada in 1492, the tragedy depicts the burning of the Qua’ran, the act that prompts the sentence  “That was but a prelude; where they burn books, they will ultimately burn people as well.”these chilling prophetic words are now engraved in the ground of Berlin's Opernplatz commemorating the horrifying book burning of 1933. Heine's words  were tragically fulfilled: Mass murder of Europe's Jews began just several years later.
Why Heine depicted Muslims as the victims of book burning and not the Jews is still an open question. But one can’t help but wonder whether or not the Nazi censors were aware of the terribly ironic scene they enacted in Opernplatz that repressive evening, or if anyone could have guessed at the tragedy to come. The mobs also burned the books of Helen Keller, an American author who was a socialist, a pacifist, and the first deaf-blind person to graduate from college. Keller responded: “History has taught you nothing if you think you can kill ideas. . . . You can burn my books and the books of the best minds in Europe, but the ideas in them have seeped through a million channels and will continue to quicken other minds.”  The US magazine Newsweek called the burnings a "holocaust of books."
The Opernplatz memorial shows what is missing. Underground, almost out of sight, no books, empty white shelves, directly under the Bebelplatz. What was lost and burnt were the books by those who the Nazis ostracised and persecuted, who had to leave the country and whose stories were no longer allowed to be told. Symbolically, the underground bookshelves have space for around 20,000 books, as a reminder of the 20,000 books that went up in flames here on 10 May 1933 at the behest of the Nazis. The Israeli artist Micha Ullman designed the library memorial, which was unveiled on 20 March 1995.
 1933 marked the beginning of a mass exodus among Germany's intellectuals and artists. Thomas Mann and Bertolt Brecht fled to America, Sigmund Freud fled to England and Lion Feuchtwanger fled to France, where he was arrested and sent to a prison camp, but escaped and fled to the United States. Those writers who didn’t emigrate, like Erich Kästner, were banned from publishing their works in Germany until after the war. The nation that had often been admired abroad as the land of poets and thinkers had made it clear to its most talented minds that they were no longer welcome.
 Today the city of Dusseldorf honours Heinrich Heineits poet with a boulevard (Heinrich-Heine-Allee) and a modern monument. In Israel, the attitude to Heine has long been the subject of debate between secularists, who number him among the most prominent figures of Jewish history, and the religious who consider his conversion to Christianity to be an unforgivable act of betrayal. Due to such debates, the city of Tel-Aviv delayed naming a street for Heine, and the street finally chosen to bear his name is located in a rather desolate industrial zone rather than in the vicinity of Tel-Aviv University, suggested by some public figures as the appropriate location.
Ha'ir (a left-leaning Tel-Aviv magazine) sarcastically suggested that "The Exiling of Heine Street" symbolically re-enacted the course of Heine's own life. Since then, a street in the Yemin Moshe neighborhood of Jerusalem and a community center in Haifa have been named after Heine. A Heine Appreciation Society is active in Israel, led by prominent political figures from both the left and right camps. His quote about burning books is prominently displayed in the Yad Vashem Holocaust museum in Jerusalem. (It is also displayed in the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum). Always more precise about  what  he loathed than  about what he loved, incapable of leading or of following party; exile, poet, jew.,Heinrich Heine was the ultimate outsider, le the last words be in his own verse,

I am a German Poet,
In German lands I sine;
And where great names are mentioned
They're bound to mention mine.


                                     Nazi book burning 1933

Friday 10 December 2021

International Human Rights Day 2021: EQUALITY - Reducing inequalities, advancing human rights.

 


“Where, after all, do the universal human rights begin? In small places, close to home – so close and so small that they cannot be seen on any maps of the world. […] Unless these rights have meaning there, they will have little meaning anywhere. Without concerted citizen action to uphold them close to home, we shall look in vain for the progress in the larger world” - Eleanor Roosevel

In 1945, the Second World War came to an end. It is estimated that over 70-85 million people perished. At the time that was just over 3% of the world’s total population. Devastated by the event, 51 countries pledged that they would never want a repeat of such mass destruction ever again. They came together and formed what is now known as The United Nations. Following their pledge to international peace and security, they realised the importance of the security of the individual. Many atrocities had taken place during the war including mass killings, atomic bombings, torture cases and genocides. In a bid to never repeat such “barbarous acts which […] outraged the conscience of mankind”, Eleanor Roosevelt was tasked to chair the Commission on Human Rights which drafted what became known as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR).

December 10th marks Human Rights Day. On this day the whole world celebrates  one of the greatest  accomplishments of the last century, by resolution 217 A(III) of 1947 the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.in 1948 was adopted by the United Nations General Assembly. With the principles having been borrowed from the Code Napoleon, the Universal Declaration became the cornerstone document for Constitutionalism in the 20th Century. 

Today it seems unimaginable that the world could ever have existed in a time where human rights were not the foundation of the social contract.. The Declaration set out, for the first time in history, those fundamental human rights that Governments all over the world undertook to respect, protect and promote. .In 1950, the Assembly passed resolution 423 (V), inviting all States and interested organizations to observe 10 December of each year as Human Rights Day.

 And ever since that auspicious day it has stood as the first major stride forward in ensuring that the rights of every human across the globe are protected. From the most basic human needs such as food, shelter, and water, all the way up to access to free and uncensored information, such has been the goals and ambitions laid out that day.

The Declaration proclaims a simple, yet powerful idea :

 "All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights,"  "They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood."

These rights are the birthright of all people: it does not matter, what country we live in and even who we are. Because we are human, we have these rights; and Governments are bound to protect them. They are not a reward for good behaviour, nor they are optional or the privilege of a few- they are inalienable  entitlements of all people, at all times- regardless of race, colour, religion, sex, language, political or other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or other status. And because they are universal, they are also matters of legitimate concern; and  standing  up for them is a responsibility that binds us all.

 It is the most translated document in the world, available in more than 500 languages.  When the General Assembly adopted the Declaration, with 48 states in favor and eight abstentions, it was proclaimed as a "common standard of achievement for all peoples and all nations", towards which individuals and societies should "strive by progressive measures, national and international, to secure their universal and effective recognition and observance".

Although the Declaration with its broad range of political, civil, social, cultural and economic rights is not a binding document, it inspired more than 60 human rights instruments which together constitute an international standard of human rights. It has helped shape human rights all over the world.

Today the general consent of all United Nations Member States on the basic Human Rights laid down in the Declaration makes it even stronger and emphasizes the relevance of Human Rights in our daily lives.The High Commissioner for Human Rights, as the main United Nations rights official, plays a major role in coordinating efforts for the yearly observation of Human Rights Day.

Human Rights Day reminds us that there is much to be done  and around the world to protect those who cannot voice or respond to perpetrated discrimination and violence caused by governments, vigilantes, and individual actors. In many instances, those who seek to divide people for subjective means and for totalitarian reasons do so around the globe without fear of retribution. Violence, or the threat of violence, perpetrated because of differences in a host of physical and demographic contrasts and dissimilarities is a blight on our collective humanity now and a danger for our human future.

Human Rights are the basic rights and freedoms that belong to every person in the world, from birth until death. They apply regardless of where you are from, what you believe or how you choose to live your life. They should never be taken away, these basic rights are based on values such as dignity, fairness, equality, respect and independence. But human rights are not just abstract concepts, they are defined and protected by law.

The aim of Human Rights Day is to raise awareness around the world of our inalienable rights – rights to basic needs such as water, food, shelter and decent working conditions. In the UK we are protected by the Human Rights Act 1998, however in other countries, especially developing countries, the laws are not in place to protect people and to ensure that their basic needs are met.

For millions of people, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights is still just a dream.Many people around the world are still denied the most basic of human rights on a daily basis. Women’s rights are still repeatedly denied and marginalised throughout the globe, despite 70 years of the milestone declaration on human rights. Confronted with widespread gender-based violence, hate and discrimination, women’s well-being and ability to live full and active lives in society are being seriously challenged. 

Racism, xenophobia and intolerance are still  problems prevalent in all societies, and discriminatory practices are widespread, particularly regarding the  targeting of migrants and refugees. including in rich countries where men, women and children who have committed no crime are often held in detention for prolonged periods. They are frequently discriminated against by landlords, employers and state-run authorities, and stereotyped and vilified by some political parties, media organizations and members of the public.

Many other groups face discrimination to a greater or lesser degree. Some of them are easily definable such as persons with disabilities, stateless people, gays and lesbians, members of particular castes and the elderly. Others may span several different groups and find themselves discriminated against on several different levels as a result.

Those who are not discriminated against often find it hard to comprehend the suffering and humiliation that discrimination imposes on their fellow individual human beings. Nor do they always understand the deeply corrosive effect it has on society at large.

The Human Rights Act is currently under attack, with the UK’s Justice Secretary having indicated, in the past, that he does not support the Human Rights Act and does not believe in economic and social rights,. As part of its efforts to hide from accountability and make itself untouchable, the Government has announced it will ‘overhaul’ our Human Rights Act.
 
Human rights are about values we all hold dear: dignity, fairness, equality. And the Human Rights Act makes our rights real. It places obligations on public authorities to respect our rights and gives ordinary people the power to enforce those rights in British courts if they don’t.
 
But the Government wants to ‘overhaul’ the Act that protects us all from the State and keeps power in check.  
The only people who benefit from weakening human rights are those in power. And that is a government that is systematically attempting to shut down all avenues of accountability. Its attack on the Human Rights Act is not an isolated incident. Its Policing Bill will criminalise protesters who dare stand up to power. Its plans for voter ID will stop people getting to the polling booth. 
 
And its Judicial Review Bill will make it harder for people to challenge the Government’s unlawful actions in court – and make it so that even winning your case won’t be worthwhile.
The Government is re-writing the rules to make itself untouchable.
 
Priti Patel's Racist cruel and hateful, anti-refugee bill  will criminalise refugees and the Bill will  see 2 out of 3 women & children who have been accepted by the UK as refugees turned away in the future, It will  give the UK Government the ability to strip individuals of their British citizenship without warning, and the UK Government would be exempt from giving notice to people if it is deemed not “reasonably practicable” to do so, or if it is in the interests of national security, diplomatic relations or the wider public interest.
 
Critics are warning the Bill is too draconian, giving Home Secretary Patel too much power over people’s lives and sends the the message that certain citizens, despite being born and brought up in the UK and having no other home, remain migrants in this country. 
 
Asylum seekers could soon face renewal on their claim every 30 months, while being subjected to the “no recourse to public funds” condition, preventing them from accessing social security services.
Campaigners have warned it risks asylum seekers falling in and out of being documented, increasing their chances of destitution.
 
The Refugee Council said: 
 
“This new approach flies in the face of the Refugee Convention, which states that the status of an asylum claim should not be dependent on the mode of entry into a country.
“It will create a group of vulnerable, precarious people, unable to plan for their futures in the UK or start to integrate. They will also have limited family reunion rights so will be kept apart from their children and spouses.
“This cruel approach will not stop people arriving in the UK. It will, however, cost more as people will be waiting in limbo for months before their claim is heard, or as they cruelly move through the court and prison system.” 
 
The humanitarian rights of refugees & displaced persons are protected legally under the UN Convention & Status of Refugees 1951 & Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights. There is a reason why Tories & media refuse to recognise those fleeing war zones as refugees.

For this  Human Rights Day we must continue to  stand with all people targeted for giving expression to the vision and values embodied in the declaration. Every day must be Human Rights Day, as every person in the world is entitled to the full and indivisible range of human rights every day of his or her life.Global human rights are not selective in their value or meaning, nor are they limited to a day or time of year. Until all people have access to these human rights we must stand up, advocate for, and insist that more must be done. Human Rights Day should serve as a reminder to act for those lacking basic rights each and everyday. 

 Human Rights Day calls on us all to ‘stand up for someone's rights today!’ It reminds us what we have achieved over the years to respect, promote and protect human rights. It also asks to recommit and re-engage in championing these rights for our shared humanity since whenever and wherever humanity's values of equality, justice and freedom are abandoned, we all are at greater risk.

Human Rights are universal rights of every human being to be treated with dignity, respect, and fairness. This year theme for Human Rights Day is; EQUALITY - Reducing inequalities, advancing human rights. The theme this year is based on Article 1 of the UDHR. The Article states that all human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights and have reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood. Equality is at the core of human rights in that through realising equality we can break power cycles and even tackle the root causes of conflict.

The COVID-19 crisis has been fuelled by deepening poverty, rising inequalities, structural and entrenched discrimination and other gaps in human rights protection. Only measures to close these gaps and advance human rights can ensure we fully recover and build back a world that is better, fairer  more resilient, just, and sustainable society for future generations.  
 
With the pandemic still ongoing, it is also necessary to address vaccine inequality and ensuring that those in need are taken care of it. The UN also puts forth the case of addressing climate change and environmental damage through a human rights lens, saying harmful practices "exacerbate existing inequalities and negatively affect the human rights of present and future generations".
With the pandemic still ongoing, it is also necessary to address vaccine inequality and ensuring that those in need are taken care of it. The UN also puts forth the case of addressing climate change and environmental damage through a human rights lens, saying harmful practices "exacerbate existing inequalities and negatively affect the human rights of present and future generations".

https://www.news9live.com/knowledge/human-rights-day-2021-history-theme-significance-and-all-you-need-to-know-139532?infinitescroll=1
With the pandemic still ongoing, it is also necessary to address vaccine inequality and ensuring that those in need are taken care of it. The UN also puts forth the case of addressing climate change and environmental damage through a human rights lens, saying harmful practices "exacerbate existing inequalities and negatively affect the human rights of present and future generations".

https://www.news9live.com/knowledge/human-rights-day-2021-history-theme-significance-and-all-you-need-to-know-139532?infinitescroll=1

Equality means that like cases must be treated alike. It means that where there is a difference in treatment, it must be justifiable and that there must be proportionality between the aim sought and the means employed when it comes to dealing with people. In some cases, affirmative action must be taken in order to even the playing field and eliminate unfair conditions. This is the only way to reduce inequalities and advance human rights.

 Principles of equality and nondiscrimination lie at the core of human rights, according to the U.N. website. “Equality has the power to help break cycles of poverty; it can give young people the world over the same opportunities; it can help in advancing the right to a healthy environment; it can help tackle the root causes of conflict and crisis.” 

 “Societies that protect and promote human rights for everyone are more resilient societies, better equipped through human rights to weather unexpected crises such as pandemics and the impacts of the climate crisis,” the U.N. website said.  “Equality and non-discrimination are key to prevention: all human rights for all ensure everyone has access to the preventive benefits of human rights but, when certain people or groups are excluded or face discrimination, the inequality will drive the cycle of conflict and crisis.”

Nearly a billion people do not have enough food to eat, and  even in wealthier countries like the UK and the US where there is an increasing growth in food banks. Poverty is a leading factor in the failure to protect the economic and social rights of many individuals around the world. For the half of the world population living on less than $2.50 a day, human rights lack any practical meaning.

Nelson Mandela once said that “overcoming poverty is not a task of charity, it is an act of justice. Like Slavery and Apartheid, poverty is not natural. It is man-made and it can be overcome and eradicated by the actions of human beings.” .

It’s important to acknowledge that human rights, have rarely been gifted to us through benevolent leaders. Rather, they have been won after long fought battles and collective struggle. We need to recognize and pay tribute to human rights defenders the world over, putting their lives on the line for others, our voice must be their voice. 

 As thousands of struggles have proved, human rights are a vital lever in the quest for equality and social justice. If governments will no longer protect human rights it will be up to us, the people to keep on fighting for them and ensure our human right are always upheld.

We all need to stand up for these Rights which are too often under threat.  We need to remind people of the importance of protecting our Human Rights to ensure that they cannot be eroded. Lets work to achieve a better life for all. And more importantly, to continue to take a stand for people whose human rights are still not being met across the globe, find a way to use our voices for those who may not have an opportunity to advocate for themselves. At the same time  strengthening  international law and justice in order to end impunity, and bring to justice those guilty of violations of human rights and offer protection to their victims. 

Today is an opportunity to reaffirm the importance of human rights in rebuilding the world we want, the need for global solidarity as well as our interconnectedness and shared humanity. A future  of cooperation among citizens, peoples and between nations. It is a a prerequisite for a more peaceful future where disputes are solved through negotiation and diplomacy.

"If your neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor, "- Desmond Tutu

http://www.un.org/en/events/humanrightsday/  

 I Have the Right

I have the right to my own opinions
to state what I believe to be the truth,
I believe in freedom of thought
I believe in freedom of speech,
I have the right to be free from bondage
to be free from chains and mental slavery,
to choose what I want to be, where I need to go
because this is my right to be free.

I have the right to speak out
this is my choice, this is my conscience,
this is my right to freedom of expression
this right allows me to speak out against oppression,
this right allows me to stand against transgression, 
                                           aggression, exploitation
this right acknowledges that all born equal and free.

Everyone  is a unique individualistic form 
all have a right to life and liberty,
dignity and pride, the security of protection
that allows us to cry, to love and laugh,
remember that when justice is forgotten 
alternative paths trample down opposition,  
decency and justice, respect, and all that has been given
so  keep on fighting for human rights with no inhibition
remember actions speak louder than words
and what unites us is greater than what seperates