See
the Person not the Colour
18-26
March 2000
European-wide Action Week Against Racism
21
MARCH
March
21st was declared International Day for the Elimination of All
Forms of Racial Discrimination by the General Assembly of the
United Nations as a reaction to the murder of 69 demonstrators
in Sharpeville, South-Africa, in 1960. During the annual European-wide
Action Week, which centres around 21 March, thousands of people
actively engage themselves for tolerance and equal rights.
This year once again hundreds of activities will take place all
around Europe, organised by a wide variety of organisations.
Activities range from special TV programs to cleaning the walls
of racist slogans.
Why cooperate in European campaigns?
Think globally, act locally
Racism is not a local issue. Equal rights is an international
demand. European campaigns can help set the agenda on all levels.
We have to campaign on local, regional and European level to
get our point across. By linking local and national actions,
we can generate European-wide publicity. We can show that there
is an enormous amount of people that believe in an intercultural
open society. It gives all participants a new energy to go on
with their everyday struggle against racism and intolerance.
You will get motivated and inspired by the ideas and enthusiasm
of other people, learn from each others experience and views,
generate more publicity because of the scope and size of the
activity, mobilise more people as you reach a combined audience,
etc.
If you would like to take part in this campaign, keep in mind
that it is the variety and creativity of many different simultaneous
activities all over Europe that make the UNITED campaigns unique.
There is a common date, and every year a theme emerges that gets
special attention. Sometimes it is a slogan, such as 'See the
Person, Not the Colour' in 2000, 'Raise Your Voice Against Racism'
in 1999, 'One Race - Human Race' in 1998 or 'Open Borders - Open
Minds' in 1995.
So: get organised! Find like-minded groups and start planning
now!.
What
can you do?
All organisations, large and small, can contribute in their own
way tot the Action Week. Student organisations and teacher-unions
frequently take up the occasion of this week to organise special
lessons, campus meetings, petitions, etc. Media may be inclined
to work with you to produce special issues, TV-programs and radio
shows. Public debates, round tables and conferences provide places
for reflection and brainstorming. By organising them during the
Action Week you give both the week and the activity more weight
and more publicity. Many organisations publish their annual report
during the Action Week. Last year thousands of people demonstrated
against the laws and attitudes that threaten the building of
an open intercultural society. We can take this week to show
our anger. Street theatre, removing graffiti and other visible
actions can alert the public to the existence of the Action Week.
Successful activities in previous years
FRANCE: National Week of Education Against Racism
The teachers unions, anti-racist organisations and students'
organisations worked together to organise a special week full
of activities in many schools in the country. The campaign was
co-ordinated nationally, but gave room to local initiatives.
INTERNET/INTERNATIONAL:
Voix Sans Frontières
AMARC-Europe, the European branch of the World Association of
Community Radio Broadcasters developed a way to broadcast a 24
hrs long program both via internet and via satellite and local
radio stations. The program gave room to anti-racist NGOs and
contained lots of reports from different countries in Europe.
NETHERLANDS:
the Netherlands Shows its True Colours
Nederland Bekent Kleur co-ordinated activities on national level
roughly in the same way that UNITED coordinates activities on
a European level. Activities took place in dozens of cities,
including visits to schools, open mosque/church, festivals, exhibitions
etc. By co-ordinating the activities (already since several years),
the week became so big and important that newspapers could no
longer ignore it.
Planning a campaign activity
Keep in mind:
- to work on the basis of 'equal rights for all'.
- that the aim should always include protection and empowerment
of victims of racism.
- that there is no such thing as 'neutrality' and no such thing
as non-political action against racism.
- that getting the issue of racism in your school or in your
business out in the open is not ruining the atmosphere. If there
was racism, it was already messed up.
Consider the following points:
- What does the campaign aim to achieve? What does your activity
aim to achieve?
- What change do you want (short AND long term)?
- Do you really want this activity or would another activity
serve just as well?
- Who is the target of the action? Who needs to change, and how?
- What do you need? Who do you need on your side? What partnerships
will help you?
- What publicity do you need?
- Try to have a planning group that includes the people most
targeted by racism, the people living in the area you work in,
the group you want to involve.
- Choose the most appropriate method:
Direct action (non-violent protest actions), political lobbying,
public demonstrations, festivals, manifestations, education projects,
press action, media.
- Delegate responsibilities.
- Make a time table for the campaign and check it regularly.
How UNITED can help
You can order copies of this poster, up to 100 are for free.
If you need more for special purposes, discuss it with the UNITED
office. We will produce a special list of activities taking place
all around Europe, which can help you to make contacts and exchange
speakers with other groups. It will be updated several times
and will be published on our website www.united.non-profit.nl.
Call UNITED if you cannot find a partner for your activities.
We might know of other NGOs in your country who are planning
something.
A media release will be sent out to all important European press
agencies, newspapers, etc. If you feel that we should include
a specific media contact from your country in our list, let us
know. Journalists who want to know about specific activities
will be informed about events in their country and are referred
to the organisations involved.
UNITED will produce a European report after the Action Week,
including as many of the activities that took place as possible.
We can only do this with your help!!
Do you need information?
UNITED can provide you with a wealth of information. You can
order a copy of the European Address Book Against Racism to find
similar organisations in other countries, or in your own country.
You can phone or e-mail the secretariat to find out who else
is organising something. You can check the UNITED website to
order the campaign poster, or other campaign material to use
in your own way.
A full list of anti-racism magazines can also be found in the
European Address Book Against Racism.
Internet
If you need to find information, internet is a wonderful medium.
Good places to start your search for anti-racism news are the
following websites:
UNITED's
home in cyberspace:
www.unitedagainstracism.org
The
largest collection of anti-racism links on Internet:
www.magenta.nl/crosspoint
The Internet Centre Anti-Racism Europe:
www.icare.to
How
you can help UNITED
Help us make the media release exciting! Announce your activities
to us! Send us your announcements, invitations, leaflets and
posters before the activities take place.
Help us make the report complete. Make sure your activity is
included! Send us reports, newspaper articles, photographs, etc.
after the event for the European report.
UN World Conference Against Racism
The United Nations has decided to hold a World Conference Against
Racism sometime between May and September 2001. Such a conference
is usually accompanied by a wave of activity of non-governmental
organisations. In 2000 a European preparatory intergovernmental
conference will take place in Strasbourg, called "All Different
- All Equal: From Principles to Practice. European contribution
to the UN World Conference Against Racism". This intergovernmental
conference will be preceded by a non-governmental forum. The
European meetings will take place in October 2000 in Strasbourg.
The European-wide Action Week would be an excellent
time
to prepare actions leading up to this. You can find more information
on the web pages of the Internet Centre Anti-Racism (I CARE,
www.icare.to),
the European Commission Against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI,
www.ecri.coe.int)
and the United Nations. An interesting initiative has been taken
in Canada, to collect a huge amount of signatures for a world
without racism before 21 March 2000 (www.march21.com).
That initiative also leads up to the UN World Conference (www.unhchr.ch/html/racism/racism.htm).
Join the campaign!
If your organisations wants to join the campaign, you can order
extra posters. Send/fax/e-mail us your planned activities (title,
date, theme, place) and the name, address and contact person
of your organisation. Maximum 100 posters for free. If you need
more for special purposes, contact us.
What is UNITED?
UNITED for Intercultural Action is the European network against
nationalism, racism, fascism and in support of migrants and refugees.
Racism, nationalism, fascism, discrimination, restrictive asylum
policies These issues have a European dimension. It is important
to fight intolerance on all levels. Linked through UNITED, more
than 500 organisations from a wide variety of backgrounds, from
all European countries, work together on a voluntary basis. They
base their cooperation on common actions and shared activities
on a mutual respect. UNITED is and will remain independent from
all political parties, organisations and states, but seeks an
active co-operation with other anti-racist initiatives in Europe.
Through the UNITED network organisations meet each other, work
on common actions and share information. European-wide action
weeks, campaigns and such are planned and discussed on UNITED
conferences. Like-minded organisations find each other on such
conferences and work together on specific projects and on specific
topics. The workers in the secretariat are in constant contact
with the network organisations, ensuring that information and
proposals for action are transmitted rapidly. Information is
received from more than 1700 organisations and mailings go out
to about 2000 groups in Europe.
If you want to get involved Discuss the ideas and aims of the
UNITED network within your organisation. Let us know that your
organisation would like to join or receive information. And add
us to your mailing list!!
RACISM
Racism is the belief that some people are superior because they
belong to a particular race. Racists define a race as a group
of people with common ancestry. They distinguish different races
from one another by physical characteristics, such as skin colour
and hair texture. In fact, there are no clear differences, and
especially no significant differences that matter. Recent research
shows that race is an imagined entity. "Race" has no
biological basis. The word "racism" is also used to
describe abusive or aggressive behaviour towards members of an
"inferior race". Racism takes different forms in different
countries, according to history, culture and other social factors.
A relatively new form of racism sometimes called "ethnic
or cultural differentiation" says that all races or cultures
are equal but they should not mix together to keep their originality.
There is no scientific proof of the existence of different races.
Biology has only determined one race: the human race.
Up
UNITED
for Intercultural Action
European network against nationalism, racism, fascism
and in support of migrants and refugees
Postbus
413, NL-1000 AK Amsterdam, Netherlands
phone +31-20-6834778, fax +31-20-6834582
info@unitedagainstracism.org,
www.unitedagainstracism.org
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