Young Baha'is address UK parliamentarians on human rights

Young Baha'is address UK parliamentarians on human rights

Member of Parliament Lembit Opik talks with four young speakers at the reception of the All Party Parliamentary Friends of the Baha'is group on 22 April 2008. From left are Collis Tahzib, Jenna Nicholas, Lavina Hassasing and Ruth Banda. Photograph: Andish
London—22 August 2008

Four young people offered their view of human rights at a reception this week in the United Kingdom Houses of Parliament.

The reception is an annual event hosted by the All Party Parliamentary Friends of the Baha'is. The National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of the United Kingdom used this year’s reception to announce a program of activities planned to mark the 60th anniversary next December of the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

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."