The 4th R, Creating a Human Rights Culture:
The Role of Service Learning, vol. 8 No. 1, Spring 1997.
Creative Activism: AIUSA Youth Working for Human Rights
Amnesty International USA has a proud history of youth activism and
human rights education. Students have been innovative, bold, and generous
_ in short _inspiring in their commitment to speak for those who have been
gagged by governments in their own countries. Here are some highlights
of young people in action through the past several years. Wherever students
are involved _ writing letters in classrooms, interning at Amnesty offices
or leading a human rights club on a high school or college campus _ they
are developing new skills and fine-tuning old ones.
- Law students in Davis, California ran an "Amnesty-o-matic"
for several years. It was an honor system letter-writing station not unlike
an automated teller machine. Amnesty's Urgent Action casesheets were available
in quantity as were stationery, envelopes, airgrammes, postards, and postage
stamps. The device was decorated with informative news clippings and had
a mail slot for completed letters. Activist students serviced the Amnesty-o-matic
daily.
- Students at a high school in the Midwest arranged a weekend "lock-in"
one Saturday night each year with plenty of pizza, pop, and letter-writing;
hundreds of students attended and dozens of new students were attracted
to the campus AI chapter. In Colorado, a cluster of a dozen high school
chapters put on a spring "Jamnesty" with half a dozen bands,
each of which gave a pro-human-rights rap before performing. Almost a thousand
students attended and signed petitions on behalf of prisoners of conscience.
- A number of scout troops and Campfire Girls in the Northeast have created
human rights badges for which youngsters write letters, create posters,
watch and discuss human rights videos, and study about human rights problems
around the world. In some elementary and middle schools, the BIG Letter
is the human rights advocacy vehicle of choice. A few times a year students
make a splash by co-writing an appeal for a victim on 3' x 4' butcher paper
and mailing it to a public official in a very large envelope.
- In a school in the Boston area a few years after the Tiananmen Square
massacre in China, activist students put together a huge Democracy Wall
in the school cafeteria. Fellow students were invited to attach poems,
essays, drawings, and collages celebrating what democracy means to them.
Later that year the wall was reassembled at AIUSA's Annual General Meeting
in Boston to the delight of attendees.
- Students from high schools and colleges intern at all the AIUSA offices
and are an invaluable asset. Many undertake very specific projects that
they carefully devise with regional or program staff and carry out with
the cooperation of members of their campus groups, local community activists
or members of specialized task forces and steering committees. Students
play a major role in running AIUSA regional meetings and the national Annual
General Meetings from the planning stages through the intense three day
programs to the massive "break-down and clean-up" stage.
- A young member of a synagogue in California created a human rights
activity for Passover which included six stations that members of the congregation
visited, each dealing with a basic human right: canned food donations to
address the right to life, donation of books to be sent to flood victims,
clothing donations, letter writing and petition signing on behalf of prisoners
of conscience.
- In Boston, a local TV station devoted part of its morning children's
show, Ready To Go, to activism on behalf of a teen-aged girl in Eastern
Europe who was removed from school and jailed because she protested losing
the right to take classes in her native language. Several students were
selected to accompany the TV crew to the Yugoslav Embassy to hand-deliver
hundreds of student letters written on the teen's behalf. The whole trip
was televised, spreading the good news of student engagement and activism
on behalf of human rights throughout the Boston metro area.
- At Stanford University and at a midwest high school, students taught
for-credit human rights courses complete with lectures, discussion, research
papers, video watching, and letter-writing. And the students who taught
earned credit themselves.
- A middle school class in Minnesota wrote and put on a human rights
drama for the whole school and sent copies of the script to the Urgent
Action Office to be distributed to teachers who might want their students
to produce the play.
It's impossible to describe all the inventive and effective ideas
that Amnesty student activists have come up with, both in the classroom
and in campus groups! Here is just a list of some more of the lively endeavors
that have worked and enriched students and their schools, as well as the
larger community, which is our needy world: banner contests, kissing booths,
bike-a-thons and road races for human rights, a competitive softball team,
school dances, lunchtime tabling, "teach-in's," and face-painting
to raise postage.