Discovering Human Dignity

Shay Cullen
9 January 2021

When I see the newly arrived children- all victims of human right violations and sexual abuse- healing and recovering in our Preda Foundation home and striving to be “good,” to be a “better person”, somehow thinking they are “bad,” I and the Preda staff continuously tell them in Filipino that:  “You are good children and youth. You have done no wrong, you are innocent victims of bad people who trafficked and abused you.”

It takes a long while for them to understand this. Then, the day arrives when they have had their fifth or sixth session of Emotional Release Therapy. That is where they dramatically confront their abusers in the padded therapy room and fight back at their rapist. They shout his name, cry and scream at him and pound the cushions as if beating him. They are tearing free from the fear and subjugation they endured.  In time, they have a new self-understanding.  It is an emotional resurrection, the greatest moment of liberation in their lifetime.

They come to realize that they are good persons and have been exploited and abused. Sandra, a 13-year-old, who was repeatedly raped and beaten by her biological father, told how she felt in a group session after her therapy, “I feel free from them, I can live on my own, I see now what is true, I have my dignity”.

The children have broken free from the culture of servility and domination and being downtrodden, and discovered the most important of all. They discovered they have that vital and all-important inherent value of all humanity- human dignity.  They have been brainwashed and told all their lives in the slums, living in poverty, without proper education, that they are of little worth, of no value and are better out earning money with their bodies. The younger ones are abused and threatened to tell no one of the sexual abuse. They are told that they did a bad thing and are made to feel guilty and dirty and are wrongly made ashamed of themselves. But from open emotional expression comes freedom and a sense of self-confidence and self-worth and empowerment from knowing that they have dignity and that their dignity has imbued them with inalienable rights. 

Human dignity is the greatest value in the Judeo-Christian tradition. It was neglected, ignored and lost for thousands of years. In fact, the word itself was lost until recent history. The idea, concept or belief in human dignity as an  ‘inherent or unearned worth of humans’ was not even used in any official or government document, researchers say, until it appeared by chance in the Mexican Constitution of 1917. Then, it was a vague reference to human value. The word only appeared in 1948 when the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was ratified by the United Nations. In the introduction, the word is used twice to justify why humans have inalienable rights. That humans have these rights is an idea, a concept, based on the belief that the human species has an ‘inherent or unearned worth of humans’ above all other creatures and species on the planet. 

Until the Universal Declaration of Human Rights came in to force in the membership nations that made up the United Nations, many countries without a fair and human rights-based legal system frequently treated people as disposable items by those in power and authority. That authority was absolute, unquestionable, and every person was at its mercy without respect or recourse.

The abominations, atrocities and genocide of World War II gave rise to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, as humanity realized that without the recognition of the dignity of the human person, and their rights arising from it enforced in law and practice, they didn’t have a chance to survive the rise of fascist authoritarian regimes. 

The principles and the rights laid out by the Declaration has been universally accepted and recognized by most nations, on paper at least.  Many regimes ignore the rights and dignity of their citizens that must be treated with respect, equality, and human value as enshrined in the Declaration and to be enforced and implemented by Rule of Law. 

There is international action, condemnation and protest when the violations of human rights and human dignity are violated. Protests, demonstrations, marches, social media campaigns raise their voice to denounce the violations although much more has to be done. 

The imposition of UN sanctions and the deployment of peace-keeping troops and the indictments of the International Criminal Court of Justice are some ways the world community can bring an erring regime to accountability and yet the massacres, child sexual abuse, violations and trampling on human dignity and rights continue unabated. Just as corrupt politicians, criminal gangs, drug cartel leaders and mafia bosses are the killers and tramplers of human rights, so too are the many individuals who abuse children and their enablers and protectors. It is only in our generation in the last twenty years that there has been an outcry and movement to condemn child sexual abuse and human trafficking and enact strict laws to bring abusers to account and to jail.Tolerance, apathy, indifference, secret approval of child abuse was the custom and in many places it still is. In the Philippines, life sentences are frequently handed down to child sex abusers and human traffickers. The strict laws, driven through congress by civil society, are most important in doing justice for the victims of these heinous crimes against children. 

Let us not forget where human dignity, respect for human rights of children and women, were first announced and taught. It was by that inspired man, the prophetic Jesus of Nazareth, who constantly championed the rights of children and declared the child  as the most important in his planned society of justice, equality, dignity and peace. To accept and respect the child was to accept him. That is a strong endorsement of human dignity of the most vulnerable in society. 

www.preda.org

PMPI Statement on the Killings and Arrests of Tumandok Indigeneous People

No day is holy for the state agents when in the silence of the morning dawn on 30 December 2020, while the whole nation is celebrating the coming of Jesus Christ, they barged into the homes of the Tumandok leaders servicing search warrants for illegal possession of firearms, ammunitions and explosives, and killed nine (9) environmental defenders and arrested seventeen (17) other leaders who they claimed as members of the Communist Party of the Philippines-New People’s Army (CPP-NPA).

 We strongly condemn this irreverent and vicious act of killing by the police and the military of the Western Visayas region. This is but a result of the red-tagging policy of this blind and cold-blooded government which is aimed at dissenters. It fails to see acts of opposition and criticism of government actions and/or inactions as expressions of citizen’s democratic rights. It always wants to solve societal problems using state armed forces.

 Should we cower in silence in the face of this impunity? Should we just put the lives of the Tumandok leaders and those others killed by this government to waste?

 The Tumandok is an alliance of indigenous peoples’ communities in Capiz and in Iloilo which strongly opposes the construction of a billion-peso government project, Jalaur Mega Dam, that would greatly impact not only the Jalaur River and the environment but also the ancestral domains and the socio-economic activities of the Tumanduk community. Their strong resistance against the development project has led its members the subject of red-tagging by the National Task Force to End Local Communist Armed Conflict (NTF-ELCAC), and harassment through intensified military presence in their communities.

 For many years, indigenous peoples who are at the forefront of the struggle to protect their land and the environment are being harassed and killed. The Global Witness “annual report into the killings of land and environmental defenders in 2019 shows the highest number yet have been murdered in a single year. 212 land and environmental defenders were killed in 2019 – an average of more than four people a week. Time after time, they have challenged those companies operating recklessly, rampaging unhampered through forests, skies, wetlands, oceans and biodiversity hotspots.”

 The state agent’s claim of regularity of their operation under the guise of Synchronized Enhanced Management of Police Operations (SEMPO) needs to be scoffed-at. The modus of planting evidence and claiming the unarmed victims fought back are like a broken record being played to justify their cowardly actions. Repeatedly, this alibi has been used to silence the victims of injustices. 

 We ask the government to recognize that war and violence is not a solution to a social malaise we now face and that dialogue and listening to what its constituents’ feel, think and desire should be the primary response to any problem.

 We thus, ask the government to change heart and heed to the cry of your people.

 We ask all the district representatives in Congress of Panay Island to protect their constituency, if the national government cannot do so. Do not separate yourselves from your people. We demand that as our representatives to truly represent us. We ask you to lead a clamor for a congressional investigation over this matter 

 And even as we urge the local governments to take action, we ask the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP),  Department of Justice (DOJ), the Commission on Human Rights (CHR) , and the whole body of Congress to initiate an impartial investigation to the injustice done to the Tumandoks tribes, and to all others related red-tagging killings and arrests.

 The Government exists to serve its citizens. Do not treat them lesser than you are, worse as your enemies. History is witness. When the time is right, the people’s will to achieve good will triumph.

Partnership Mission for People’s Initiatives (PMPI) is formerly the Philippine Misereor Partnership Inc., a social development and advocacy network of 250 members from faith-based groups, non-government organizations and people’s organizations grouped into 15 regional clusters all over the Philippines.

Laiko 3rd Advent Recollection with Global Catholic Climate Movement Philippines

Towards a New Evangelization with Christ in a Manger

Please watch and like from YouTube
Sangguniang Laiko ng Pilipinas

Global Catholic Climate Movement Philippines and Sangguniang Laiko ng Pilipinas were live on Facebook on December 12, 2020 at 2-4 PM for an Advent Recollection presided over by Archbishop Emeritus of Cagayan de Oro, Antonio Ledesma. Here is the link to the FB Video: https://www.facebook.com/511855985685246/videos/2713847172261723.