Title: Human Rights
1Human Rights
- They are the Basic rights that we have come to
value and cherish as part of our life. These
rights are free speech, freedom of religion,
trial by jury, freedom of the press, the right to
express our opinions, the ability to control our
own destiny, the right to own our own property,
etc. - "Q" Why have people been denied their Human
Rights? - The reasons vary Â
- 1. Political Oppression (Totalitarian Regimes)
- 2. Religious Persecution
- 3. Racial Discrimination
- 4. Economic Domination (Imperialism / Colonialism)
2- Christians in the Roman Empire
- Why were the Christians persecuted?
- 1. The early Romans were polytheistic, similar to
the Greeks and their Mythology. Christians were
monotheistic. Â - 2. Paul traveled throughout the Roman empire
seeking people to convert to this religion, the
Roman leaders took this to mean Paul was planning
to overthrow the government. - 3. The Christians were not tolerant of other
religious groups, as a result they were subject
to discrimination.
3Colonialism/Imperialism
- Q" What is a Colony?
- A territory or country conquered by a foreign
country. - "Q" What is Colonialism?
- when one people or government extends its control
over foreign people or territories. - The mother country takes advantage of the
resources and people in the colony to benefit
their own economy.
4"Q" How long has colonialism been practiced?
- Colonialism has existed since ancient times.
Among the most notable empires of the ancient
world were those of the Egyptians, Babylonians,
and Persians. - The Phoenicians established colonies along the
shores of the Mediterranean as early as 1100 BC.
Phoenician colonization was motivated by the
desire to expand and control trade.
5- By the 8th century BC many of the Greek
city-states were rapidly expanding along the
coasts of the north Aegean, the Black Sea, and
southern Italy. - The Greeks were driven by the need for arable
land to sustain a growing population and the
desire to develop commerce. - The two most famous Greek city-states, Sparta
and Athens, were colonial powers in roughly the
6th and 5th centuries BC.
6- "Q" How is modern Colonialism different than in
Ancient times? - Modern European colonialism dates from the 15th
century and can be divided into two overlapping
phases 1415 to about 1800 and 1800 to World War
II. - In the first phase, Western Europe, led by Spain
and Portugal, expanded in the East Indies and the
Americas. - In the second, Great Britain lead European
expansion into Asia, Africa, and the Pacific.
7- European colonization of the Americas was
motivated by many objectives - - The quest for precious metals
- - The need for new land for agriculture
- - The search for freedom from religious
persecution - - The desire to convert the indigenous peoples
(natives) to Christianity.
8"Q" What were the effects of Colonialism?
- The effects of colonialism can best be described
as mixed, both for the colonizers and the
colonized. - An empire brought numerous benefits to the
colonial powers, including emigration
opportunities, expanded trade and profits, and
strategic resources. - At the same time, conquest brought with it
significant costs.
9- Colonizers were forced to provide for colonial
administration, defense, and economic assistance
and were frequently dragged into conflicts they
didnt want to get involved with. - Colonization certainly had harmful effects on the
peoples of the colonized areas. - Life-styles were disrupted, cultures destroyed,
and entire peoples subjugated or exterminated. - As a result, the so-called Third World countries
continue to have a deep resentment of the former
colonial powers.
10- On the other hand, contact with European
civilization also brought the conquered people
numerous economic, health, technological, and
educational benefits. - "Q" What factors led to the end of Colonialism?
- The collapse of Europe and successive global wars
in the 20th century resulted in the collapse of
modern colonialism. - The growth of self-determination (Nationalism) in
the colonies and the decline of European
political and military influence contributed to
the rapid growth of independence post-1945 - In a matter of three decades, the colonial
empires built over a number of centuries, were
almost totally dismantled.
11The African Slave Trade
- While the European involvement in the Trans-
Atlantic slave trade to the Americas lasted for
just over three centuries, the Arab involvement
in the slave trade has lasted fourteen centuries,
and in some parts of the Muslim world is still
continuing to this day. - Between 1450 and the end of the 19th century,
slaves were obtained from along the west coast of
Africa with the full and active co-operation of
African kings and merchants.
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14- In return, the African kings and merchants
received various trade goods including beads,
cowrie shells (used as money), textiles, brandy,
horses, and perhaps most importantly, guns. - Africans were used primarily for Plantation work
in the Caribbean, and Brazil on the sugar
plantations. - While the mortality rate for slaves being
transported across the Atlantic was as high as
10, the percentage of slaves dying in transit in
the Trans Sahara and East African slave trade was
between 80 and 90! - While two out of every three slaves shipped
across the Atlantic were men, the proportions
were reversed in the Islamic slave trade.
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19- The slaves shipped across the Atlantic were for
agricultural work, the slaves destined for the
Muslim Middle East were for sexual exploitation
as concubines, in harems, and for military
service. - Slaves who went to the Americas could marry and
have families, slaves destined for the Middle
East were castrated, and most of the children
born to the women were killed at birth. - It is estimated that possibly as many as 11
million Africans were transported across the
Atlantic, however, at least 28 million Africans
were enslaved in the Muslim Middle East.
20- As at least 80 of those captured by Muslim slave
traders were calculated to have died before
reaching the slave markets, it is believed that
the death toll from the 14 centuries of Muslim
slave raids into Africa could have been over 112
million. - While Christian Reformers spearheaded the
anti-slavery abolitionist movements in Europe and
North America, there was no comparable opposition
to slavery within the Muslim world.
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23- Apartheid Rigid separation of the races. Has
its roots from Imperialism. Started when South
Africa received independence from the British
gov't. and the white minority refused to allow
native South Africans the ability to mix with
their culture. - What were the effects of Apartheid on South
Africa  - a. all South Africans were classified as either
white, black, coloured (mixed races) or Asian.
Non whites could not vote. They were denied the
ability to participate in govt. - b. non whites were restricted as to where they
could live and where they could work. - c. all non whites had to carry pass books to
control their movement. - d. non whites could not go to "white" schools,
restaurants, beaches, or ride on their busses.
24- The Sharpeville (Demonstration) Massacre in 1960
what started as a peaceful demonstration against
the policies of Apartheid, turned violent when
police opened fire on the crowd killing more than
60 people. Nelson Mandela, one of the organizers,
went into hiding but was captured in 1964 and
sentenced to life in prison. - b. groups such as the ANC (African National
Congress) and the OAU (Organization of African
Unity) worked to bring world attention to the
issue and gain international support - c. Economic Embargoes were placed upon South
Africa businesses until they ended the Apartheid
laws. The United Nations worked to force an end
to the segregated society that existed. - d. Archbishop Desmond Tutu used his position to
rally clerics worldwide to call for an end to
Apartheid (won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1984)
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28- the Soweto demonstration of 1976 was caused by
the law requiring all schools to use the
Afrikaans language - In 1990 Nelson Mandela was released from
prison. - In 1991 F.W. de Klerk repealed the law
requiring - all South Africans to be classified by
race. - In 1994 Nelson Mandela is elected President of
South Africa.
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30Ethnic Cleansing Genocide
- The systematic execution of a group of people
because of their race, religion, or ethnic
background. There are many examples of Ethnic
Cleansing that have occurred throughout the
course of history. - Rwanda Hutus vs. Tutsis
- In 1993 a violent civil war erupted between 2
rival tribes in Rwanda. Over 1 million Tutsis
were exterminated by the Hutus. The Hutus leaders
then forced over 2 million members of their own
tribe to flee their country. Some say that they
hoped the Diaspora would help to create a potent
army to conquer more land. Instead the Refugees
settled in barren lands and eventually the
conditions got so bad that at its worst the death
rate was 1 per minute. People were dying of
cholera, dysentery, bubonic plague and the
measles.
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34- The Former YugoslaviaÂ
- In 1991 this country was ripped apart by civil
war. The territories of Serbia, Croatia and
Bosnia were created. Between 1991 and 1995 this
civil war was responsible for some horrible
atrocities- the systematic execution and rape of
many Bosnians. - These war crimes and the concentration camps that
were created eventually got the United Nations
involved to try and end the hostilities.
Unfortunately the hostilities are still going on
today. - Serbians / Orthodox Catholic
- Croatians / Roman Catholic
- Bosnians / Muslim
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38- Khmer Rouge Cambodia 1970'sÂ
- Pol Pot, leader of the Khmer Rouge renamed
Cambodia Kampuchea. He then set out to destroy
all traces of foreign influence. He forced the
inhabitants of the cities who had come into
contact with the foreigners to move to the
country. There many died of starvation as well
as torture if suspected of being disloyal. More
than 1 million of the 7 million Cambodians were
killed in what became known as the Killing
Fields. In 1979 Vietnamese soldiers invaded
Cambodia and overthrew Pol Pot - The Great Purge Joseph Stalin 1930's-1940'sÂ
- In order for Stalin to increase his political
power he began to systematically execute many
so-called traitors. The cause of the Purges was
to eliminate the people that criticized the
failures of Stalin's five Year Plans. By the time
these purges were completed it is estimated that
over 15 million people died in the Soviet Gulags
(concentration camps.)
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44- The Cultural Revolution 1966 - 1969Â
- Mao Zedong launched the Great Proletarian
Cultural Revolution to rid China of its enemies.
The Red Guard traveled throughout the country
getting rid of all of Mao's critics. By the time
the army had to be called out to restore order it
is estimated that close to 20 million people were
killed. - Russians vs. the Ukrainians 1922-1939Â
- Between the years 1922 and 1939 the Ukrainians
tried many times to rebel against Soviet
aggression. Unfortunately, they were unable to
resist and as a result they lost their autonomy. - In 1932 Stalin began his policy of
Collectivization, since the Russians didn't
possess enough fertile land the Ukrainians lost
most of what they produced to feed the Russians. - As a result 7 million Ukrainians lost their lives
from malnutrition. - In 1991, after the fall of the USSR, Ukrainians
finally received the autonomy they were seeking
since the early 20's.
45- Turks vs. the Armenians 1908
- In the late 1800's a group of young army officers
formed a revolutionary group called the Young
Turks. They wanted to strengthen the Ottoman
Empire and end Western Imperialism. They
supported Turkish Nationalism and began a policy
of religious persecution against Armenian
Catholics because they distrusted their
allegiance.
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49Darfur
- Darfur has been involved in a deadly conflict for
over three years. - More than 2 million innocent civilians have been
forced to flee their homes and now live in
displaced-persons camps in Sudan or in refugee
camps in neighboring Chad. - Many others died from disease and malnutrition.
Thousands of women and girls have been
systematically raped. Villages throughout the
region have been burned to the ground. - The conflict in Sudan's western Darfur region has
its history in a territorial dispute between
nomads and pastoralists.
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58- Nomads have been encroaching on farming
communities in Darfur for many years. - Since early 2003, Sudanese armed forces and
Sudanese government-backed militia known as
Janjaweed have been fighting two rebel groups
in Darfur, the Sudanese Liberation Army/Movement
(SLA/SLM) and the Justice and Equality Movement
(JEM). - More than 3.5 million men, women, and children
are completely reliant on international aid for
survival.
59Gender Discrimination
- When a boy is born in most developing countries,
friends and relatives exclaim congratulations. A
son means insurance. He will inherit his father's
property and get a job to help support the
family. - When a girl is born, the reaction is very
different. Some women weep when they find out
their baby is a girl because, to them, a daughter
is just another expense. - The dowry practice makes the prospect of having a
girl even more distasteful to poor families - Originally intended to help with marriage
expenses, dowry came to be seen as payment to the
groom's family for taking on the burden of
another woman. - UNICEF estimates that around 5,000 Indian women
are killed in dowry-related incidents each year.
A new bride is at the mercy of her in-laws should
they decide her dowry is too small
60- In many communities, it's a regular practice to
breastfeed girls for a shorter time than boys so
that women can try to get pregnant again with a
boy as soon as possible. - As a result, girls miss out on life-giving
nutrition during a crucial window of their
development, which stunts their growth and
weakens their resistance to disease.
- Young girls receive less food, healthcare and
fewer vaccinations overall than boys. Not much
changes as they become women. - Tradition calls for women to eat last, often
reduced to picking over the leftovers from the
men and boys.
61gender discrimination in India
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?v28jQdTNuM2c
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vmnmtKLQRh6g
62gender discrimination in China
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vK7XXcwhwL0I
- Discrimination Middle East
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vG_ZWTx-QUj4feature
related - Honor Killings
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vyJhptP3gv9o
63- Infanticide and Sex-Selective Abortion
- In extreme cases, parents make the horrific
choice to end their baby girl's life. - Sex-selective abortions are even more common than
infanticides in India. - The gender ratio across India has dropped to an
unnatural low of 927 females to 1,000 males due
to infanticide and sex-based abortions - China has its own long legacy of female
infanticide. In the last two decades, the
government's infamous one-child policy has
weakened the country's track record even more. By
restricting household size to limit the
population, the policy gives parents just one
chance to produce a coveted son before being
forced to pay heavy fines for additional
children.
64- In 1997, the World Health Organization declared,
"more than 50 million women were estimated to be
'missing' in China because of the
institutionalized killing and neglect of girls
due to Beijing's population control program. - In cultures that maintain strict sexual codes for
women, if a woman steps out of boundsby choosing
her own husband, flirting in public, or seeking
divorce from an abusive partnershe has brought
dishonor to her family and must be disciplined. - Often, discipline means execution. Families
commit "honor killings" to salvage their
reputation tainted by disobedient women.
65- Forty-five percent of Ethiopian women say that
they have been assaulted in their lifetimes. In
1998, 48 percent of Palestinian women admitted to
being abused by an intimate partner within the
past year. - In 1999, a 16-year-old mentally handicapped girl
in Pakistan who had been raped was brought before
her tribe's judicial counsel. Although she was
the victim and her attacker had been arrested,
the counsel decided she had brought shame to the
tribe and ordered her public execution - Three women fall victim to honor killings in
Pakistan every dayincluding victims of rape. - In areas of Asia, the Middle East, and even
Europe, all responsibility for sexual misconduct
falls, by default, to women
66- For the young girls who escape these pitfalls and
grow up relatively safely, daily life is still
incredibly hard - School might be an option for a few years, but
most girls are pulled out at age 9 or 10 when
they're useful enough to work all day at home. - Nine million more girls than boys miss out on
school every year - A girl is likely to work from before daybreak
until the light drains away. She walks barefoot
long distances several times a day carrying heavy
buckets of water, most likely polluted, just to
keep her family alive - She cleans, grinds corn, gathers fuel, tends to
the fields, bathes her younger siblings, and
prepares meals until she sits down to her own
after all the men in the family have eaten
67- In most African and Asian countries, women's work
isn't even considered real labor - Should a woman take a job, she is expected to
keep up all her responsibilities at home in
addition to her new ones, with no extra help - Some families decide it's more lucrative to send
their daughters to a nearby town or city to get
jobs that usually involve hard labor and little
pay. - That desperate need for income leaves girls easy
prey to sex traffickers, particularly in
Southeast Asia, where international tourism
gorges the illegal industry - It's estimated that 1 million children around the
world are involved in the sex trade a third of
all sex workers in Southeast Asia are between the
ages of 12 and 17
68women sex trade in thailand
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vqpXrJHShcnE
69- Families in small villages along the Chinese
border are regularly approached by recruiters
called "aunties" who ask for their daughters in
exchange for six years' wages - Most Thai farmers earn only 150 a year
- "When I was at work, 50 percent of me hated what
I was doing, But the other 50 percent wanted to
stay so that I could earn money for my parents
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71- Chinese Foot Binding Practices
- Between the ages of four to seven, the foot
binding process occurred, and young girls would
have to sit as a strip of bandage ten feet long
and two inches wide was wrapped tightly around
the foot. - The four small toes were broken and bent under
the sole. The arch of the foot was indented to
make the foot appear smaller, a symbol of beauty
and wealth. Â
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74 75- The bandage was tightened each day and a girl's
foot was put into smaller and smaller shoes until
the desired three-inch feet were formed. - The process took two years, and by the time it
was finished, the foot was useless for walking. - In the Chinese culture, a woman could not get
married unless her foot was bound. Oftentimes a
woman's value was measured by the size of her
feet. - Bound feet also became a symbol of chastity, for
once a woman's feet were properly bound, she
would never be able to walk again on her own. - If she werent carried, then the woman would have
to resort to crawling on her hands and knees.
76- Lotus shoes were never taken off, even when the
woman slept. - It was not uncommon for a woman's feet to get
gangrene, or even cause the woman to be
paralyzed. - Sometimes toes would fall off from the
constriction.
77Corsets
- Nineteenth century women wore corsets to create
an hour glass figure which was designed to
improve her attractiveness but the chest, rib
cage, and abdomen, were permanently deformed. - the shape of the corset could influence the shape
of the spine, and that the high waisted corsets
compressed the lungs to cause respiratory
diseases, and that low waisted corsets compressed
the womb to cause problems with menstruation,
pregnancy, and childbirth
78Corsets were introduced to girls at the age of
fourteen, and after years of pulling tighter and
tighter, as the waist was expected to be 18-19
inches around, several internal organs were
dislocated.
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82The Burka
- The women of Afghanistan are treated very harshly
everyday because of the Sharia laws enforced by
the Taliban. - The Sharia is a set of laws that is based on the
Koran, the Muslim holy book. - The Sharia laws regulate religion, politics,
social issues, domestic and private life. - They regulate almost everything in a womans
life. The laws even regulate a womans right to
exist as a human being.
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84- Women are considered "lower" than men for many
reasons. One justification for the low value of
the woman is that Eve was made from Adams rib.
Eve also caused them to be kicked out of the holy
gardens because she ate some of the forbidden
fruit. - Under the strict laws of the veil, women are
considered subhuman. Under them, women are fit
only for household tasks and procreation
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86- A chador is a full-length semi-circle of fabric
open down the front. It is thrown over the head
and held shut in front - the origin of the Persian custom began in ancient
Mesopotamia, where respectable women were veiled,
and servants and prostitutes were forbidden to do
so. - The veil marked class status.
87What is Female Genital Mutilation?
- Female genital mutilation (FGM) is a deeply
entrenched cultural tradition practiced by
various ethnic groups in more than 28 countries
on the African continent. - It is also found among populations in countries
on the Arabian Peninsula, in the Middle East, and
in Southeast Asia. - In the African countries of Djibouti, Eritrea,
Sierra Leone, Somalia, and Sudan, nearly 90 of
women are estimated to have been genitally
mutilated - FGM includes all procedures involving total or
partial removal of the external female genitalia
or other injuries to the female genital organs,
whether for cultural, religious or other
non-therapeutic reasons
88- According to the World Health Organization (WHO)
classification, there are four main types of
FGMType I partial or total excision of the
clitoris (clitoridectomy). The traditional name
for this kind of mutilation is sunna.Type II
the removal of the prepuce and all or part of
the labia minora along with the clitoris.Type
III, the most brutal form, consisting of the
removal of part or all of the clitoris and the
removal of the labia minora and the
stitching/narrowing of the vagina to form a tiny
opening no larger than a grain of rice or a
millet seed to allow discharge of urine or the
menstrual flow
89The origin of Female Genital Mutilation
- According to some experts, excision dates back to
ancient Egypt but was also practiced on slaves in
ancient Rome, and was viewed as an expression of
the right of property on the slaves body - the practice already existed in sub-Saharan and
Central-Eastern Africa well before the spread of
Christianity or Islam - An estimated 135 million girls have undergone
Female Genital Mutilation. That is approximately
6,000 procedures per day
90- The practice of infibulation, where a woman's
genitals are sown together, helps to ensure
virginity in young girls, and fidelity in wives. - Women who are uncircumcised are not trusted to be
in control of their own sexuality. - In strongly patriarchal societies, it is
important that the identity of a child's father
is known, so that the father's wealth can be
passed only to his children.
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96The Burmese Paduang people known as the 'long
necks' owing to the displacement from
progressively stacking these brass rings over the
neck. Once worn, they can never be removed as the
result would be fatal. The practice derives from
the once held belief that it protected from
Tigers.
97Women whose necks have been stretched by these
rings have very poor balance. If these rings
were removed, and there was no one to hold up a
woman's neck, then she would suffocate to death.
98Discrimination in Pakistan
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?v71_syjTvz2Afeature
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