Reflections on the 75th anniversaries of the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the first fatalities on UN staff members in Palestine

Human Rights Day, 10 December

United Nations Green, London

My friends,

On 10 January 1946, exactly where we are standing now, large crowds watched as diplomats from around the world arrived at Methodist Central Hall for the first session of the United Nations General Assembly. A historic moment.

For the first time as united nations, they could demonstrate their commitment to the UN charter.

A determination to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war

Reaffirm their faith in fundamental human rights,

And equal rights for men and women

Equal rights

We are not here today to judge how far short we still are from their noble ambitions.

But surely their most noteworthy and far-reaching achievement was, after countless meetings, in managing to agree on the framing of a Universal Bill of Rights. Yes, their efforts to reach agreement on a binding convention failed.

But there was concord, by overwhelming majority, on a non-binding Declaration.

This became the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

The magnitude of their achievement cannot be underestimated as already in 1948, they could foresee how the Cold War would soon paralyse international relations.

Yes, they knew the final document was not perfect. In fact, it would take eighteen years before agreement was reached on two binding covenants to the Declaration, on Civil and Political Rights and on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights.

But the Declaration had by then gathered its own momentum. It opened the way to binding conventions on Discrimination against Women, the Rights of the Child, Rights of Persons with Disabilities, on Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment

And opened the way to Declarations on the Rights of Persons Belonging to National or Ethnic, Religious and Linguistic Minorities, and the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. And many more.

The Declaration itself has been translated into more than 500 languages, the majority of these considered to be endangered. And there lies a catch. The peoples who dare speak those languages too often do so against the will of their governments. Yes, they are endangered also.

But if there is a lasting legacy of that first meeting here in Westminster, one which all of us here should be proud, then this is it. It shows that humanity, with all its faults, can come together, reaffirming our faith in fundamental human rights,

But we are here also to mark another seventy fifth anniversary. By the time the Universal Declaration was agreed in Paris in December 1948, the United Nations was already facing challenges in Palestine. Count Folke Bernadotte, its appointed mediator there, had been assassinated four months earlier. He was not the first.  

Now, as we digest Friday’s failure by members of the UN Security Council to agree on a course of action that might halt the loss of even more innocent human lives in Gaza and through Palestine and Israel, we mourn the more than one hundred and forty members of staff working for the UN Relief & Works Agency in Gaza who have died there since the Hamas atrocities on 7 October.  

Each year we mark the sacrifice of those who have died while serving as UN peacekeepers, men and women often facing danger in a distant country with which their own has no dispute. But today, we mark the loss in Gaza of those who have died while working for the benefit of their neighbours, their communities, those in their street.

They rank alongside their colleagues working with the UN and its agencies in Sudan, Ukraine, and elsewhere, bringing together fractured communities, fighting child labour, advancing climate action – in all, contributing to progress and development in many different ways.   

But they are more than locally employed workers. They worked in the name of the United Nations.

They worked In our name, the name of people here in Westminster, in Manchester, in Birmingham, and in your country too, wherever you have come from.  

In such moments, when we are together, we are the peoples, the peoples of the United Nations.

Today, in our small ceremony, we are united.

In our grief

And in our determination to reaffirm our faith in fundamental human rights.

Now, young members of the Westminster United Nations Association will lay the wreath in memory of those who have died in Palestine.

And we remember those cruelly taken from their homes on 7 October, who have died or cannot be reached.

And those too, suffering from bombardment that none should have to watch let alone endure.   

After laying the wreath, they will sign the Declaration, recommitting all of us here to its noble ambition. Then the Revd Tony Miles, Superintendent Minister of Methodist Central Hall will share a prayer.     

David Wardrop, Chair, Westminster United Nations Association

This event is fully described in our News Pages here.

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