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- Press Releases from the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'í's of Trinidad and Tobago:
- From the Media Committee:
- Press Releases from the Bahá'í International Community:
- From The Office for the Advancement of Women:
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Press Releases from the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'í's of Trinidad and Tobago: |
| November 2007 |
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From The Media Committee |
November 25th has been designated as the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women and from this day until Human Rights Day on December 10th. Baha’is throughout Trinidad and Tobago are planning activities to create awareness of violence against women and to provide a forum for discussion to seek potential solutions.
Throughout history men, due to their superior physical strength, have assumed the role of provider and protector for the women and children in their family. The submissive woman was expected to respect and obey the father and husband who looked after her while she nurtured her sons and daughters. This balance of mutual existence has, however.disintegrated in many societies and male dominance has been severely abused. World-wide statistics today reveal the suffering of women at the hands of men, their intended protectors. Atrocities such as domestic violence, rape, incest, child marriages, female genital mutilation and so called ‘honour killings’ are perpetrated against women and girls, who may also be sold into economic slavery or prostitution. Women are also denied their rights to property, inheritance and freedom of movement.
The status of women and girls has improved to some extent over the past 50 years and many have achieved higher rates of literacy, education and earning power. Laws have also been passed internationally to protect women, but it is difficult to implement them due to cultural values, behaviours and institutions. These societal values are initially forged and accepted in the family. The family teaches children about the nature of power and its expression in interpersonal relationships between men and women. They learn to accept authoritarian rule and violence as a means of expression. The family unit is the foundation of the community and the nation, thus, if violence is committed against women and girls in this environment there will be repercussions in the wider society.
Religions traditionally cultivate the values of the community. Yet some power seeking individuals today use religion as an obstacle to eradicating violent and exploitative behaviours perpetrated against women. Likewise some governments fail to punish and prevent violence against women and girls. In a male dominated society, they lack the political will to act and hide behind religious and cultural reservations to ignore international treaties, which condemn such violence.
The Teachings of the Baha’i Faith have always stressed the advancement of women, but not to create beings, who are superior to men. Rather they advocate that women should become equal partners and cooperate with men in order to bring about the harmonious advancement of the whole society. Baha'u'llah, the Founder of the Baha’i Faith says that, “Humanity is like a bird with its two wings - the one is male, the other female. Unless both wings are strong and impelled by some common force, the bird cannot fly heavenwards. According to the spirit of this age, women must advance and fulfill their mission in all departments of life, becoming equal to men. They must be on the same level as men and enjoy equal rights.”
This implies that humanity as a whole can never realize its full potential until women have truly attained their rightful status and receive equal opportunities to progress. As long as women are prevented from attaining their highest possibilities, so long will men be unable to achieve the greatness which is theirs. This cannot be forced upon an unwilling society, but the progress and proficiency of women can only be achieved when they are granted equal education and opportunity. It is thus, important to educate men in some societies to change their views about an inferior role for women and it is important to encourage and advise women so that they are able to take full advantage of education , both material and spiritual , thus, enabling them to become the equals of men in all fields of endeavour. The Baha’i Writings state that the happiness of mankind will be realized when women and men coordinate and advance equally, for they are the compliment and helpmeet of each other.
It is so important that women should be educated that Baha’u’llah has said that although boys and girls should both receive education, the girls should have priority. This is because women bear the children and nurture them in their earliest years and they are thus the first educators of the next generation. Their influence upon their child will thus, have a tremendous and lasting impact, which will remain with the child for the rest of his or her life. If women are well educated, forming peaceful ideals and abandoning all prejudices, their influence upon the next generation will effect the future of society and result in the advancement of civilization as a whole.
The time has come for a change in our attitude towards women and girls, who represent half the population of the world. The teachings of the Baha’i Faith advocate the peaceful transformation of society, a transformation based on justice, involving education for all, the alleviation of poverty and the abandonment of deeply rooted prejudices. Abdul-Baha, the son of Baha’u’llah, tells us that, “The world in the past has been ruled by force, and man has dominated over woman by reason of his more forceful and aggressive qualities both of body and mind. But the balance is already shifting: force is losing its dominance, and mental alertness, intuition, and the spiritual qualities of love and service, in which women are strong, are gaining ascendancy.”
At a time when conquest and aggression have lost their credibility as means of solving difficult problems, qualities in which women are strong, such as the capacity to link intuition to the other rational processes, and facility with networking and co-operation, are gaining importance. The involvement of women in making decisions at all levels of society is an essential element in the attainment of world-wide unity, and as Bahá'u'lláh wrote more than a century ago, "The well-being of mankind, its peace and security, are unattainable unless and until its unity is firmly established."
In the document issued by the Baha’i International Community in 2006 entitled “Beyond Legal Reforms: Culture and Capacity in the Eradication of Violence against Women and Girls,” two suggestions are advocated to foster the spiritual, social and intellectual development of all persons and transform the world into a non-violent society. The first involves education for all in moral values relevant to our society today, which are consistent with the ideals of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the collective progress of the entire human race.
The curriculum suggested is based upon the belief that every person is a spiritual being with limitless potential for noble action. Its objectives include the ability: to participate in non-adversarial collective decision making; to act with rectitude of conduct based on ethical and moral principles; to cultivate one’s sense of dignity and self worth; to take initiative in a creative, disciplined form; to commit to empowering educational activities; to create a vision of a desired future based on shared values and principles and to inspire others to work for its fulfilment; to understand relationships based on dominance and to contribute towards their transformation into relationships based on reciprocity and service.
The second recommendation is the support of an autonomous United Nations agency with a comprehensive mandate dedicated to the full range of women’s rights and concerns. This would guarantee women a voice at the highest levels of decision making in the United Nations
Violence against women and girls is an obstacle to the achievement of equality, development and peace. The progress of humanity depends on men and women working together; therefore, both must be equally developed. Women, given equal opportunities for education, have already proven to be the equals of men in intellectual and creative capacity. Men must encourage and facilitate the full development of women, as women must support men in their development towards this new condition of a peaceful, non-violent society.
Courtesy: The National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá’ís of Trinidad & Tobago
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| February 2007 |
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From The Media Committee |
Every year on March 8th the United Nations International Day for Women is celebrated all over the world. In Trinidad and Tobago booths are set up along the Brian Lara Promenade with literature and exhibits from various women’s organizations and their supporters march in groups, behind banners, along the streets of Port of Spain. Baha’i women will participate in this event as usual this year, because the cause of women is a very important issue in the Baha’i Faith. The event this year will be held on March 7th.
Baha’u’llah, the Founder of the Baha’i Faith declared His Mission in 1863 and passed away in 1892. During His lifetime He proclaimed laws and teachings relevant to the time in which we live, including the concepts of the Oneness of God, the Oneness of religion and the Oneness of mankind. A fundamental prerequisite to achieving the oneness of mankind is to establish equality between men and women. Equality of the sexes is, for Baha’is a spiritual and moral standard essential for the unification of the planet and the unfoldment of world order.
Baha’u’llah has declared that the happiness and stability of mankind will not be realised until women become equal to men. He says, “Humanity is like a bird with two wings – the one is male, the other female. Unless both wings are strong and impelled by some common force, the bird cannot fly heavenwards. According to the spirit of this age, women must advance and fulfil their mission in all departments of life, becoming equal to men. They must be on the same level as men and enjoy equal rights.”
The Baha’i Writings state that women will achieve equality with men through education. In the Baha’i world community the education of women has high priority. Although the principle of universal education applies to both sexes, the education of women, because they will become mothers and therefore are the first teachers of the children, is considered more important than that of men. If a choice has to be made then the education of girl children has priority. When women receive the same education and opportunities as men, they will become the counterpart of men in ability and capacity and will advance equally, for they are the ‘compliment and helpmate’ of each other. Only then will true progress and attainment for the human race be facilitated.
The Baha’i community of Trinidad and Tobago look forward to meeting all members of the public at our booth in Port of Spain on Friday March 7th.
Courtesy: The National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá’ís of Trinidad & Tobago
Office for the Advancement of Women
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Press Releases from the Bahá'í International CommunityClick here to go to the Bahá'í International Community Website
| July 2006 |
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From The Office for the Advancement of Women |
- By many measures, the status of women and girls has improved significantly over the last 50 years. They have achieved higher rates of literacy and education, increased their per capita income, and risen to prominent roles in professional and political spheres. Moreover, extensive local, national and global networks of women have succeeded in putting women's concerns on the global agenda and catalyzed the creation of legal and institutional mechanisms to address these concerns. Notwithstanding the positive developments, a relentless epidemic of violence against women and girls - perpetuated by social norms, religious fanaticism, and exploitative economic and political conditions - continues to wreak havoc in every corner of the world. As the international community struggles to implement laws to protect women and girls, it is evident that a massive divide still separates the legal apparatus and the culture - embodied in our values, behaviors and institutions - required to stem the epidemic.
- The alarming violence against women and girls takes place against the backdrop of two simultaneous processes that characterize the present global condition. The first is a process of disintegration, which in every continent and every arena of human life reveals the impotence of outworn institutions, obsolescent doctrines and discredited traditions, and leads to chaos and decline in the social order. The deterioration of the ability of religions to exercise a moral influence has left in its wake a moral vacuum filled by extremist voices and material conceptions of reality that deny the dignity of human life. An exploitative economic order, fuelling the extremes of wealth and poverty, has pushed millions of women into positions of economic slavery and denied their rights to property, inheritance, physical security and equal participation in the productive enterprise. Ethnic conflicts and failing states have swelled the number of women migrants and refugees, forcing them into positions of yet greater physical and economic insecurity. Within the home and community, the high incidence of violence within the family, the increase in degrading treatment of women and children, and the spread of sexual abuse have accelerated this decline.
- Alongside a pattern of deterioration, a second constructive and unifying process can be discerned. Rooted in the ethic of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and fuelled by a growing solidarity of women's efforts around the world, the last 15 years have succeeded in putting the issue of violence against women and girls on the global agenda. The extensive legal and normative framework developed during this time has brought to the attention of a distracted international community, the culture of impunity within which such abuse was tolerated and even condoned. 1993, the landmark UN Declaration on the Elimination of Violence Against Women defined violence as:"Any act of gender-based violence that results in, or is likely to result in, physical, sexual or
psychological harm or suffering to women, including threats of such acts, coercion or
arbitrary deprivations of liberty, whether occurring in public or in private life. [1]"
This definition challenged the fallacious notion that violence against women and girls was a
private matter. The home, the family, one's culture and tradition were no longer to be the final
arbiters of just action where violence against girls or women was concerned. The subsequent
appointment of a Special Rapporteur on violence against women provided yet another mechanism
for investigating and bringing the many dimensions of this crisis to the attention of the
international community.
- Despite major advances in the last fifteen years, the failure of nations to decrease the violence has
laid bare the shortcomings of a primarily 'reactive' approach and has gradually come to embrace
the broader goal of prevention of violence in the first place. Framed differently, the challenge now
before the international community is how to create the social, material and structural conditions
in which women and girls can develop to their full potential. The creation of such conditions will
involve not only deliberate attempts to change the legal, political and economic structures of
society, but, equally importantly, will require the transformation of individuals - men and women,
boys and girls - whose values, in different ways, sustain exploitative patterns of behavior. From
the Baha'i perspective, the essence of any program of social change is the understanding that the
individual has a spiritual or moral dimension. This shapes their understanding of their life's
purpose, their responsibilities towards the family, the community and the world. Alongside critical
changes in the legal, political and economic architecture slowly taking shape, the development of
individuals' moral and spiritual capabilities is an essential element in the as yet elusive quest to
prevent the abuse of women and girls around the world.
- The idea of promoting specific morals or values may be a controversial one; too often in the past
such efforts have been associated with repressive religious practices, oppressive political
ideologies and narrowly defined visions of the common good. However, moral capabilities, when
articulated in a manner consistent with the ideals of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
and aimed at fostering the spiritual, social and intellectual development of all persons, represent a
key element of the kind of transformation required for a non-violent society to take shape.
Moreover, such capabilities must be anchored in the central social and spiritual principle of our
time - namely the interdependence and interconnectedness of humanity as a whole. The goal of
moral development, then, is shifted from individualistic notions of 'salvation' to embrace the
collective progress of the entire human race. As our understanding of the world's social and
physical systems has evolved to embrace this paradigm, so too must we develop the moral
capabilities required to function ethically in the age in which we live.
- How does this translate into educational objectives? A number of Baha'i schools and institutions
of higher education have identified specific moral capabilities which help to equip children and
youth to develop skills of moral reasoning and to assume the responsibility of contributing to the
betterment of their communities. The basis for such curricula is the belief that every person is a
spiritual being with limitless potential for noble action but that potential, in order to manifest, must
be consciously cultivated through a curriculum attuned to this fundamental human dimension.
Among the moral capabilities identified by Baha'i educational institutions include the ability to:
participate effectively in non-adversarial collective decision-making (this includes the
transformation of exploitative patterns of behavior based on the use of force and falsely rooted in
the idea of conflict as a mainstay of human interaction); to act with rectitude of conduct based on
ethical and moral principles; to cultivate one's sense of dignity and self-worth; to take initiative in
a creative, disciplined form; to commit to empowering educational activities; to create a vision of a desired future based on shared values and principles, and to inspire others to work for its
fulfillment; to understand relationships based on dominance and to contribute towards their
transformation into relationships based on reciprocity and service. In this way, the curriculum
seeks to develop the individual as a whole - integrating the spiritual and the material, the
theoretical and the practical and the sense of individual progress with service to the community.
- While such values can be taught in schools, it is the family environment in which children grow
and form views about themselves, the world and the purpose of life. To the degree that a family
fails to meet the fundamental needs of the children, to that same degree will society be burdened
with the consequences of neglect and abuse and will suffer greatly from the resulting conditions of
apathy and violence. In the family, the child learns about the nature of power and its expression in
interpersonal relationships; it is here that she first learns to accept or reject authoritarian rule and
violence as a means of expression and conflict resolution. In this environment, the widespread
violence committed by men against women and girls constitutes an assault on the foundational
unit of the community and the nation.
- The state of equality in the family and in the marriage requires an ever-increasing ability to
integrate and unite rather than to separate and individualize. In a rapidly changing world, where
families find themselves unbearably strained under the pressures of shifting environmental,
economic and political upheavals, the ability to maintain the integrity of the family bond and to
prepare children for citizenship in a complex and shrinking world takes on paramount importance.
It is imperative, then, to help men as fathers understand their responsibilities in a family beyond
economic well-being to include setting an example of healthy male-female relations, of
self-discipline and equal respect for the male and female members of the family. This is a
complementary role to that of the mother, who is the first educator of her children and whose
happiness, sense of security and self-worth is essential to her capacity to parent effectively.
- What children learn in the family is either confirmed or contradicted by the social interactions and
values that shape their community life. All adults in the community - educators, health workers,
entrepreneurs, political representatives, religious leaders, police officers, media professionals and
the like - share a responsibility for the protection of children. In so many cases, however, the
protective web of community life appears irreparably torn: millions of women and girls are
trafficked every year and subjected to forced prostitution and slavery-like conditions; migrant
workers face a double marginalization as females and as migrants, suffering mental, physical and
economic abuse at the hands of their employers in an informal economy; violence against older
women, whose numbers have risen and who often lack the means for self-protection, has greatly
increased; child pornography has spread like a virus feeding the appetite of a seamless,
unregulated global market; in many countries, even the act of getting to and attending school has
put girls at a tremendous risk for physical and sexual abuse. Exacerbating the conditions brought
on by weak states and the failure of law enforcement, is the profoundly moral dilemma that forces
the community to ask: what moves an individual to exploit the life and dignity of another human
being? What fundamental moral capacity has the family and community failed to cultivate?
- Across the world, religions have traditionally played a defining role in cultivating the values of a
community. Yet today, many voices raised in the name of religion constitute the most formidable
obstacle to eradicating violent and exploitative behaviors perpetrated against women and girls.
Using religious appeals as a vehicle for their own power, proponents of extremist religious
interpretations have sought to 'tame' women and girls by limiting their mobility outside of the
home, limiting their access to education, subjecting their bodies to harmful traditional practices,
controlling attire and even killing to punish acts which were claimed to abase the family honor. It is religion itself that stands in desperate need of renewal. A core element of such renewal is the
need for religious leaders to state unequivocally and become the standard bearers of the principle
of equality of men and women - a moral and practical principle urgently needed to realize progress
in the social, political and economic spheres of society. Today, religious practices and doctrines in
flagrant violation of international human rights standards must be subject to deeper examination
and scrutiny, bearing in mind that all religions contain the voices of women, which have often
been absent from the evolving definition of what religion is and what it requires.
- The individual, her family and community environment are ultimately under the protection of the
state; it is at this level that enlightened and responsible leadership is desperately required. Most
governments, however, continue to abdicate their international obligations to punish and prevent
the violence and exploitation of women and girls; many lack the political will; some fail to
allocate adequate resources to implement the laws; in many countries specialized services
addressing violence against women and girls do not exist; and work on prevention has in almost
all contexts been limited to local short-term measures [2]. In fact, few states can claim even the
smallest reduction in overall prevalence [3]. Many states continue to hide behind cultural and
religious reservations to international treaties condemning this violence - further perpetuating a
climate of legal and moral impunity rendering the violence and its victims largely invisible.
- The era of developing legal frameworks must now be followed by an emphasis on implementation
and prevention. The foundation of such measures is a strategy rooted in the education and training
of children in a way that enables them to grow intellectually as well as morally, cultivating in them
a sense of dignity as well as a responsibility for the well-being of their family, community and the
world. From a budgetary perspective, prevention involves the deliberate adoption of
gender-specific measures to ensure that an adequate proportion of resources is allocated towards
the provision of accessible social services and law enforcement. Such efforts must be reinforced
by clear definitions of violence, as well as comprehensive data collection methods in order to
evaluate national efforts in this area, and to raise awareness among men and women of the gravity
and prevalence of violence occurring in their community.
- The international community, despite its important leadership on this issue through the 1993
Declaration, its acknowledgement of violence against women and girls as "an obstacle to the
achievement of equality, development and peace" and the work of the Special Rapporteur, has
been divided and sluggish to put its words into practice. In 2003, the failure to act was highlighted
at the meetings of the 47th session of the UN Commission on the Status of Women which, for the
first time in the history of the Commission, proved unable to arrive at a set of agreed conclusions
regarding violence against women. In this case, cultural and religiously-based arguments were
used in an attempt to circumvent countries' obligations as outlined in the 1993 Declaration. It is
imperative, therefore, at future meetings of the Commission that decisive language with regards to
the elimination of violence against women and girls be adopted as agreed conclusions, setting out
not only the legal but moral tone befitting of this global epidemic.
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In order to deliver on its many commitments, the international community needs to dramatically
increase the power, authority and resources dedicated to women's human rights, gender equality
and women's empowerment. The Baha'i International Community is part of discussions that
suggest creating an autonomous United Nations agency with a comprehensive mandate dedicated
to the full range of women's rights and concerns. These derive from the Beijing Platform for
Action, the Cairo Programme of Work, and the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination Against Women and ensure that the human rights perspective is fully integrated
into all aspects of UN work. To guarantee a voice for women at the highest levels of decision-making at the UN, such an agency should be led by a director with the status of Under
Secretary-General. To effectively carry out its mandate, the institution requires a sufficient
national presence as well as independent women's rights experts as part of its governing body.
- Efforts to eradicate the epidemic of violence against women and girls must proceed from and be
reinforced by every level of society - from the individual to the international community.
However, they must not be limited to legal and institutional reforms, for these address only the
manifest crime and are incapable of generating the deep-rooted changes needed to create a culture
where justice and equality prevail over the impetuousness of authoritarian power and physical
force. Indeed the inner and outer dimensions of human life are reciprocal - one cannot be reformed
without the other. It is this inner, ethical and moral dimension which now stands in need of
transformation and, ultimately, provides the surest foundation for values and behavior which raise
up women and girls and, in turn, promote the advancement of all of humankind.
Notes
- United Nations General Assembly resolution 48/104 of 20 December 1993. Declaration on the
Elimination of Violence Against Women, Article 2. UN Document A/RES/48/104.
- United Nations Division for the Advancement of Women (2005). Report of the Expert Group Meeting:
Good practices in combating and eliminating violence against women. 17-20 May 2005, Vienna Austria.
http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/egm/vaw-gp-2005/docs/FINALREPORT.goodpractices.pdf
- Ibid.
BIC-Document Number: 06-0702
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