{"id":2027,"date":"2010-12-21T09:00:46","date_gmt":"2010-12-21T09:00:46","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=2027"},"modified":"2010-12-21T09:00:46","modified_gmt":"2010-12-21T09:00:46","slug":"can-you-send-an-extra-card-this-holiday-season","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2010\/12\/21\/can-you-send-an-extra-card-this-holiday-season\/","title":{"rendered":"Can you send an extra card this holiday season?"},"content":{"rendered":"
I am only a member of two charities. One of them is
the WWF<\/strong><\/a>, which I don’t preach about too much – a
desire for all those beautiful animals we’ve got on this planet to still
be there when I look for them tomorrow could be described as a selfish desire,
when there are so many other good causes out there.<\/p>\n Then there is human rights charity
Amnesty International<\/strong><\/a>, which I will happily preach about and
never stop. They’re a human rights campaign group who work to
peacefully protect the rights set out in the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights<\/a> for everyone in the world.<\/p>\n Every year around Christmas time they run their
Greeting
Cards Campaign<\/a>. This isn’t about wishing prisoners of conscience
a Merry Christmas –\u00a0 not all of these countries celebrate
Christmas.\u00a0 It’s about encouraging supporters, at a time when
lots of people are sending cards anyway, to send messages of support to
someone who is in danger or unjustly imprisoned, or otherwise in need of
Amnesty’s help.<\/p>\n A criticism
I’ve often heard is “What can a simple Christmas card do?”
A fair question – when some of these people are being tortured or
under threat of execution, what good is a piece of folded card with a
picture of a kitten wearing a Santa hat really going to do for
them?<\/p>\n Well, for a method of peaceful
protest, quite a lot, actually. Especially when that card is in a post bag
with one thousand, two thousand others.<\/p>\n Some of these people are trapped in prison cells, with very little
contact with the outside world, and these cards tell them,
“We’re here, we care, we support you, and we’re doing what
we can to get you out.”<\/p>\n Some of
these people, the campaign groups under threat of violence, the
families of those who have disappeared<\/a> or been unjustly killed, are
already working with Amnesty International. They know who we are,
they’ve met Amnesty representatives in their country, but these
messages will show them just how many people they’ve got on their
side.<\/p>\n Some of these people may not even
SEE their cards. The prison may not deliver them. But for the prison staff,
the regime, the guards who might be having doubts about whether this is
right or good or whether they’re going to get blamed for this one day
if the people in power change, the message will have been delivered.
“The rest of the world is watching.”<\/em><\/p>\n Watch this interview with former
Guant\u00e1namo Bay prisoner Omar Deghayes, The
Power of Letter-Writing<\/a>, if you’re not convinced.<\/p>\n There have been thirty-two individuals and
groups highlighted this year who need your support. Each has a page on the
website dedicated to them, with an address for sending cards, so you can
pick one address or several. Cases of particular interest to Bad
Reputation readers might be the Women’s
Rehabilitation Centre in Nepal (WOREC)<\/a> or Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA)<\/a> or the Seven
Prisoners of Conscience in Syria<\/a> in prison for five to seven years
for -oh wait- publishing pro-democracy articles on the internet.
That’s
Bad Reputation: The Syria Edition<\/strong> put to rest, then.<\/p>\n You might not agree with all thirty-two
cases; activism against the death penalty (as in the case of Troy
Davis<\/a>) is an issue that divides many people, but remember the right
to life and the right to be free from inhuman, cruel and degrading
punishment are important parts of the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights.<\/p>\n It may be too late now to
send a card that will arrive in time for the 25th of December, but a
general message of support will be appreciated at any time. If you have
already sent a card, there are links on every page, (Already Sent A
Card?) where you can write to politicians, ambassadors, and other people
with power over the lives of others and express your thoughts on each
case.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n \n To find out more about Amnesty’s work, check out their
website<\/a>, follow them on Twitter @AmnestyUK<\/a> or subscribe
to one of their RSS feeds, such as this
one on Women’s Rights<\/a> or this one on LGBT
rights<\/a> all over the world.<\/em><\/p>\n \n \n