The Tennessee Celebration of International Human Rights Day will take place on December 9th at 5pm virtually.
Tennesseans typically gather each
year around December 10th to celebrate International Human Rights Day.
The committee opted to hold the event virtually for the second year in a row. During the event, leaders are acknowledged,
and awards will go to human rights champions in these categories: Outstanding Service
and Lifetime Achievement.
Beverly Watts, director of the
Tennessee Human Rights Commission, will serve as master of ceremonies for the
affair. Mel Fowler-Green, director of Metro Human Relations Commission, will
comment on our theme: “The Universal Declaration of Human Rights: Foundation
for Dignity.” A Q&A incorporating the theme will be moderated by David
Plazas of the Tennessean, and he will pose questions to Zulfat Suara, a 2017
recipient of the Outstanding Service Award for Human Rights and first Muslim
elected to Metro Council.
The Rising Advocate Awards will go
to Timothy Hughes, an activist who works at the intersection of public policy
& social justice; and Joseph Gutierrez, the Education Program Officer at
the Dan and Margaret Maddox Fund who also coordinates the work of API Middle
Tennessee, an Asian & Pacific Islander-serving community-based
organization.
The Outstanding Service Award will
go to Judge Rachel Bell who has served as a judge since 2012, during which time
she established a community court that has a mission to focus on preventive,
diversionary, and restorative justice initiatives to move the needle for
marginalized people.
The Lifetime Achievement Awards are
going to Ms. Andrea Conte, former first lady of Tennessee and founder of You
Have the Power; and Rev. Enoch Fuzz, the pastor of Corinthian Missionary
Baptist Church who has long advocated for all people.
A committee of human rights
organizations, nonprofits, and advocates, including the Tennessee Human Rights
Commission, Metro Human Relations Commission, Tennessee United for Human
Rights, the Church of Scientology, and others, work together each year to plan
the event.
“Each year on Human Rights Day we
look at challenges–those we have overcome and those we face. We hope that a
brief look at our victories will give us the hope and strength to reach into
the future,” says planning committee chair Rev. Brian Fesler, pastor of the
Church of Scientology in Nashville. “The day centers around the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, and this year we focus on human rights as the
foundation for dignity.”
All information regarding the event
can be found on the website www.tnuhr.org.
No comments:
Post a Comment