UN Has Duty To Speak Out For Human Rights
UN Has Duty To Speak Out For Human Rights, Ban Says At Holocaust Event
New York, Jan 22 2011 7:10PM
The United Nations, which was created in the aftermath of the Second World War, has a duty to stand up and speak out for human rights and offer a voice to the voiceless, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said today at an event to remember the victims of the Holocaust.
"The United Nations was created in
hope?. and hope is what it stands for to this day," he said
in "Let us work together to make the UN all
that it can be, all that it must be -- a force for
democracy? a champion of freedom? a lamp for human dignity,
human rights and human aspiration. "Above all, let us
renew our collective determination to never allow such a
terrible passage of history to happen again," he told the
congregants, w "For me? for many people in the world? you are
symbols -- symbols of human endurance, symbols of hope,
symbols of the redemptive power of remembrance." In 2005,
the General Assembly designated 27 January, the anniversary
of the liberation of the Auschwitz death camp, as an annual
International Day of Commemoration to honour the victims of
the Holocaust, and urged Member States to develop
educational programmes to instill the memory of the tragedy
in future generations.
"It is a day to remember the dead
-- the millions who perished in the darkest chapter of human
history," noted the Secretary-General. "It is a day to
celebrate the lives of those who survived. "Above all, it
is a day to speak out? to speak out against those who would
deny the Holocaust, who would diminish it or 'explain' it
away. "Let us also remember: the United Nations was
created, in part, to prevent such a thing from ever
happening again. In the very best sense, th "As United Nations Secretary-General, I never forget this
fundamental mission: to stand? to speak out? for human
rights and human decency. To protect the world's innocents.
To speak for those who would otherwise not be heard. To
offer help to those in need." Yesterday, Mr. Ban met at UN
Headquarters with a group of young people who are members of
the International Auschwitz Committee. They were from
several countries, and several faiths, and were accompanied
by several Holocaust survivors. They told the
Secretary-General that for them, there are two hearts in the
world: 'one is Auschwitz, the other the United
Nations.' "The one is the remembrance of the past. The
other is the determination never to let that past be
repeated," said Mr. Ban. "Never again." Various activities
are scheduled to be held around the world in the coming week
in connection with the Day, which this year focuses on the
theme, "Women and the Hol Events
in New York will include the opening on Monday of the
exhibition "The Memories Live On," which features drawings
of Auschwitz made by an unknown prisoner of the
concentration camp, as well as a screening on Tuesday of the
documentary film "Daring to Resist," which recounts the
stories of three young Jewish women who found unexpected
ways to fight back against the Nazis.
hich included some survivors of the
Holocaust.
e United
Nations was founded in human misery and human tragedy.
ocaust: Courage and
Compassion," and will pay tribute to the bravery and
ingenuity of the women who faced Nazi persecution with
strength and dignity during the Second World War.
ends