Dr. Andrew Conteh is living proof that an education can take you anywhere. Fluent in over five languages and having studied or taught at institutions across three continents, his passion for education and human rights has led him from Sierra Leone, Africa to a position as chair of the political science department at Moorhead State University. It has been a journey of nearly half a century, including nineteen years as a professor at Moorhead State University in Moorhead, Minnesota. After years of teaching students to think critically about global human rights issues, it is interesting that Conteh’s efforts to promote basic human rights as a Human Rights Center Fellow took place in his own Moorhead community. For Conteh, however, it was just a chance to apply the academic concepts he teaches in the classroom to the very realistic problem at hand.
“It was an opportunity to keep doing what I was doing,�? he explains,
“There was a great need in our community for human rights education.�?
Conteh received an Upper Midwest International Human Rights Fellowship
Grant in the spring of 2001 to design and direct a series of educational
workshops
to foster human rights sensitivity in the Moorhead community. Conteh designed
his proposal in response to a report sponsored by the Minnesota Advisory
Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, which had reached
unsettling conclusions
about the “status of equal opportunity for minorities in Moorhead, Minnesota.�?
The report found that Moorhead’s small minority community felt that fair
police services and judicial proceedings were not available to them,
and that the
community held a general ethnic and racial prejudice.
Conteh’s program targeted many groups in the Moorhead community, hoping
to increase their understanding of basic human rights: “One way of
dealing with
human rights
was through education. We exposed our community to what human rights were
and cultivated a good understanding of the philosophical, historical,
and cultural
basis of human rights.�?
The Moorhead city council saw the relevance of Conteh’s project and helped
him organize seminars for different segments of the community including
high school
teachers and students, the police force, and city employees. He also
trained members of the Moorhead Human Rights Commission, for whom he
had a firm
message: “We have a responsibility to teach others that human rights
belong to everyone.
Human rights are those rights which you enjoy simply because you are
a human being. They are not a privilege. They are a responsibility.�?
The series of lectures and training sessions initiated by Conteh concluded
in the fall of 2001, but Conteh is hopeful that they had a lasting effect
on minority
relations in his community. “I cannot say what [the effect of my program]
was, but it was a starting point. Education is a continual process. The
important thing is to keep it alive! It is a process that ceases only
when you die.�?
These are the words of a man whose passion for education has been a life-long
commitment. Conteh was born in Freetown, Sierra Leone, where the education
he received at a local parochial school opened his mind to endless
opportunities not previously available to him; “Education was first.
Our parents were
ready to sell anything to invest in our education. We saw it as a tool
of liberation
and integral to the anti-colonial movement. We believed education was
an opportunity to participate in the global world. I still believe that.�?
Conteh believed so strongly in this message that he followed this commitment
to education out of his native Sierra Leone at the age of eighteen.
He studied at Oxford University and received his Ph. D. in international
law from Kiev
University. He has since taught at Columbia, the University of Kansas,
and Moorhead State.
Although human rights had always been an integral part of Conteh’s
passion, it was his training in international law that allowed him
to focus on
human rights
as the central message of his teaching. “Sometimes, what people think
is right is not. They are misinformed about certain dubious things
they do.
Unless you
educate people they will not know what human rights are. People must
talk about human rights.�?
The Human Rights Center Fellowship allowed Conteh to use his extensive
experience as a human rights activist and educator in his local
Moorhead community at
a time when it was most needed. Conteh, however, is quick to emphasize
that the
education process must continue: “When you teach, you learn as
well. When you approach students for their thoughts and ideas, you
are
better for
it. We have
learned that the community must be communicating on a regular basis
rather than waiting until there is a dilemma. It is crucial to
remember that
human rights
issues exist in every society. The U.S. is not an exception.�?
Conteh will continue to encourage such communication in his courses
at Moorhead State and plans to travel internationally in the
near future to help other
communities establish human rights clinics. When asked what advice
he
had for the next generation
of human rights activists, the ever-optimistic Conteh replied,
“Believe in what you do, and do it because you believe in it.
Don’t be scared
of anything.
That’s
all.�?