https://heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/p/december-10-2025
"Today is Human Rights Day, celebrated internationally in honor of the day
seventy-seven years ago, December 10, 1948, when the United Nations General
Assembly announced the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights (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 Byelorussian
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 twenty years brought
wars that involved countries around the globe.
Part of the mission of the U.N. was “to reaffirm faith in 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
U.N. 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, U.N.
Secretary-General Trygve Lie 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.
“[T]he 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.”"
Cheers,
*** Xanni ***
--
mailto:xanni@xanadu.net Andrew Pam
http://xanadu.com.au/ Chief Scientist, Xanadu
https://glasswings.com.au/ Partner, Glass Wings
https://sericyb.com.au/ Manager, Serious Cybernetics