Ridván reception - what those young people said…
Baha’i World News Service reported on the Baha’i reception to celebrate the Festival of Ridván in the House of Commons:
One of the messages presented by Ruth Banda, Jenna Nicholas and Collis Tahzib, all members of the Baha’i Faith, and their friend Lavina Hassasing, was that there is a difference between the principle of human rights and the reality of human rights.
“As the ideals of human rights become more mainstream, we hope that our generation can play its part to fulfil the promise of dignity and equality for all,” Miss Nicholas, 18, told the 100-strong audience, which included members of Parliament and the House of Lords, and representatives of the media, various faith communities, and nongovernmental organizations.
“As young citizens at the beginning of a new century, my friends and I have reflected on what the values enshrined in the U.N. Declaration of Human Rights mean to us today in a world much more connected than it was in 1948,” she said. “As a young Baha’i, I recognize in the two key concepts of equal rights and dignity, the secular expression of the ideas I acknowledge within my faith.”
“I was born in the country of Zambia,” Miss Hassasing, 20, told the guests, “and across my home country and indeed the African continent, social and economic rights are fundamental to the ability of people in exercising civil and political rights. Without an education, it is more difficult to participate meaningfully in political processes…. Many girls are denied the opportunity to an education. In many families, particularly in rural areas, parents opt to educate their male children while they prepare the female children for marriage.”
Miss Banda, also 20, who studied with Miss Hassasing in Zambia, added:
“Having had the opportunity to go to an international school that promotes education (for girls), we hope to help others realize what they as human beings are entitled to.”“The record of some states in guaranteeing rights for their own citizens remains ultimately woefully inadequate and lamentably defective,” said Collis Tahzib, who is 15. “It falls to our generation to realize the promise of human rights.”
They delivered their speeches clearly, professionally, and from the heart.
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