EDITORIAL
COVER STORY
- A Precious Gift to Humanity
INTERNATIONAL SOLIDARITY
- The Other Side of the Kingdom
- Convention Now!
AFAD FEDEFAM
Together Now!
- Tying the Future with the Past
- Getting Back on Track
INTERNATIONAL LOBBY
- Still Fighting
- In Memory of the Disappeared
- The Power
of One
PHOTO ESSAY
- Protect All Persons From Enforced Disappearances
NEWS FEATURES
- Building on Nilo’s Legacy
- Filipinos Fight Against Disappearances
- Justice Suspended
- The Munir Murder
- Another Case of Impunity
STATEMENTS
/REPRINTS
- FEDEFAM Statement...
- An Open Statement to the GRP and NDFP Panels ...
- Parvez Imroz’ Award...
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
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INTERNATIONAL LOBBY WORK: |
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by Geeta Patel |
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The Power Of One
Khurram Parvez receives prestigious Reebok
Human Rights Award in New York |
It
was an evening of music, film, frustration, and tears, but in the end, a
three-tiered sold-out auditorium rushed to its feet in thunderous ovation,
hundreds of hands expressing defiance of injustice around the world.
Khurram Parvez stood in the light and closed his eyes, a million memories
running through his head. One message was loud and clear: Keep going.
In the heart of New York City, Srinagar-native Khurram
Parvez was among the four activists honored with the Reebok Human Rights
Award during the ceremony held at the New York University Skirball Center
for Performing Arts on May 27, 2006.
Parvez, 28, was recognized for his continued work with
the Jammu and Kashmir Coalition of Civil Society, an organization devoted
to the documentation and defense of human rights violations in Kashmir.
Through the Jammu and Kashmir Coalition of Civil Society, Khurram has
advocated for fair elections, investigations of disappeared people,
defense of human rights victims and for the creation of space for
democratic discourse by involving the youth in various social endeavors.
Human Rights violations in Kashmir were at their worst
between 1993 and 1996. However, many activists today say that the crisis
level has again risen. In Khurram’s words, "the presence of more than 500
thousand soldiers equipped with draconian laws and protected with
impunity, along with 2,000 militants makes Kashmir the hottest conflict
zone in the world."
Khurram was thirteen years old when his grandfather was
killed during a peaceful demonstration. Rather than resorting to violence
to avenge his grandfather’s death, Khurram studied and turned to a
peaceful solution to widespread human rights crisis in Kashmir. In 1996,
as a student of Kashmir University, Parvez started a helpline, which
provided guidance and assistance to students affected by the conflict.
After college, Khurram had the opportunity to leave Kashmir and its bloody
memories and live abroad free from violence. But he didn’t. He stayed. He
committed himself instead to human rights work despite threats to his own
life.
Then, in 2004, Khurram Parvez became a victim of the
conflict. He lost his leg in a landmine accident while monitoring
elections in Kashmir. His driver and his close friend, Aasia Jeelani, died
in that accident. On the day of the Reebok Awards, images of that fateful
day played across a giant screen as if the ghosts of these two brave souls
were in the room, compelling all to listen.
In a powerful speech, Khurram reminded hundreds of
Americans that lasting peace would only come from a deeper understanding
of the human face beyond the headlines. "This
award stands as a symbol of remembrance of all those faces unseen, voices
unheard and souls familiar as well as strangers whose killings and
sufferings everyday have deepened our commitment and cemented our belief
in the rights movement."
The Reebok Human Rights Board, chaired by Paul Fireman,
receives 10,000 nominations every year from all over the world. After
careful review and further reference, they chose four recipients of the
award and bring them to New York for the event, followed by a tour of
schools and strategic meetings.
For Khurram, those meetings were vital as it connected
him with the students, community leaders and lawmakers in New York,
Boston, and Washington DC. By the end of the week, Khurram was eager to
return to Kashmir and resume his work with a newfound faith and challenge
from the global community.
"Be that Kashmir, Chechnya, Darfur or any similar
problem, all are in dire need of sustained global attention. In this
context, global civil society, of which American civil society is an
influential constituent, has a special role to play in supporting the
rights movements based on people’s aspirations," he said.
Before stepping off the brightly lit stage in New York,
Khurram looked hard into the eyes of the captivated American audience. He
called upon the words of the American civil rights leader Martin Luther
King to further deliver his point: "Injustice anywhere is the threat to
justice everywhere." |
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Geeta H. Patel is an associate professor for Women’s Studies at
Wellesley College. She joined the department in 1994 from the University
of Iowa where she had served in the administration and also taught in the
Department of Asian Literature and the Program in Comparative Literature.
Trained in South Asian studies, Geeta Patel teaches courses on South Asian
gender, history and aesthetics, cross-cultural sexuality, and history of
sexuality, and incorporates into her courses issues on political economy,
race, and class. |
The
Voice |
Vol. VI No.1 November 2006
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