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April 22, 7:00 pm
Great Room
Seegers Union
Muhlenberg College
Allentown, PA

*This is not an Amnesty International event, but may be of interest to AI supporters.

Professor Ingrid Mattson will present a lecture, “Framing Muslim Women: Islam, Gender and Human Rights in the Global Media” on Tuesday, April 22 at 7p.m. in the Great Room, Seegers Union. The event is free and open to the public.

In her talk, Dr. Mattson will address the case of Pakistani rape-survivor Mukhtar Mai and how her situation was helped or distorted and her story told and re-framed by various groups such as Pakistani and international women’s groups, international journalists and other media and politicians.

Ingrid Mattson, Director of Islamic Chaplaincy and Professor at the Macdonald Center for Islamic Studies and Christian-Muslim Relations at Hartford Seminary in Hartford, CT, is the first convert to Islam and the first female to lead the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA).

She earned her Ph.D. in Islamic Studies from the University of Chicago in 1999. Her research focuses on Islamic law and society; among her articles are studies on slavery, poverty and Islamic legal theory. Dr. Mattson was born in Canada, where she studied Philosophy at the University of Waterloo, Ontario (B.A. ’87). From 1987-1988 she lived in Pakistan where she worked with Afghan refugee women. In 2001 she was elected Vice-President of ISNA and in 2006 she was elected President of the organization.

Aside from her many other accomplishments, you might have heard her as a guest on NPR’s Speaking of Faith just recently.

Muhlenberg College gratefully acknowledges the Christian A. Johnson Endeavor Foundation’s support of the Center for Ethics.

Agenda for Group #531 meeting

Following is the agenda for Group 531′s regular bimonthly meeting on Feb. 26, 2008.

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL GROUP #531
St. Timothy Evangelical Lutheran Church
140 S. Ott St., Allentown, PA
February 26, 2008, 7-9 PM
Group Coordinator: Dan Laxar (570-668-5753); Treasurer: Phyllis Sinclair
Dues: $10/year (or what you can afford)

  1. Sign in, letter (phone call, email) count, “pass the hat, for the room, introductions
  2. Eastern/Central PA State Meeting report—Dan
  3. Lobbying report—Phyllis and Bill
  4. Treasurer’s report–Phyllis
  5. International Violence Against Women Act (S.2279)—petition, issue brief, flyers
  6. Post card handout
  7. Urgent Action—Individual at Risk in Turkey<
  8. AIUSA National Priorities—discussion
  9. MARO Membership Survey results—Dan
  10. Letter from Republic of Colombia
  11. Economic, Social and Cultural Rights DVD for loan

Upcoming Events
3/7-3/14—IVAWA call-in to Sen. Specter
3/24—Meeting of Group #347 (Bethlehem, PA), 7-9 PM
4/25-427—Annual General Meeting, Crystal City, VA (across the river from DC)

Holiday Fundraiser

On December 22 and 23 the Allentown and Bethlehem Groups 531 and 347 combined their fundraising efforts by wrapping books at the Barnes and Noble in the Lehigh Valley Mall, Whitehall. The total raised for their two days was $276.07 which the two groups shared equally. Former Bethlehem Group Coordinator, Karen Berry, has always spearheaded the yearly fundraiser with great success.

The Bethlehem Group also wrapped gifts on December 16 in the Sage store at the Promenade Shops in Saucon Valley. Despite terrible weather members Nancy Kelley and Tony Marino still netted $65.00.  

Meeting Notes: Allentown

Dan from the Allentown group writes

Hello all, a brief recap of our last meeting:

  • A somewhat smaller than usual group welcomed visitor April Zappaterrini, the new Eastern PA Area Coordinator, who outlined the resources her position can offer us as a group.
  • In addition, we were joined by two Lehigh U. students who are filming a documentary on social justice movements.
  • I shared with the group a summary of decisions arrived at by last August’s International Council Meeting (ICM) in Morales, Mexico. The ICM meets every two years and is the highest grass-roots decision-making body in the organization.
  • We agreed to send a letter I wrote on behalf of our group’s Prisoner of Conscience, Rev. Bienvenido Samba Momesori, who remains in prison in Equatorial Guinea.
  • We also agreed to subsidize the registration fee of any group member who attends a Regional Conference or Annual General Meeting (next one to be held in DC in April) from our group’s treasury.
  • our next meeting will be Dec. 18 at the St. Timothy, since the fourth Tuesday of the month falls on Christmas
  • we need volunteers for 3 or 4 hour shifts wrapping books at our Barnes and Noble fund-raiser–this on Dec. 22 and 23 at the Lehigh Valley Mall store in Whitehall. Please get in touch with Karen Berry at norberry@fast.net if you can participate.
  • And finally, the Bethlehem group will be meeting Nov. 26, but at a new (temporary) meeting place–the Lehigh Dialogue Center on Avenue A, across Airport Road from the Airport–please request directions from Karen (as above) or Mary Mesaros at msmesaros@msn.com.

Thanks to all who attended the Group 531 meeting–those who didn’t, you were missed! Hope to see you all Dec. 18. Dan Laxar, Group 531 Coordinator

This is not an Amnesty International event, but may be of interest to AI supporters.

Muhlenberg College in Allentown is holding a speaking event entitled “Darfur: It’s Time To Globalize Our Responsibility.” The speaker, Stephanie Nyombayire, is a Rwandan student at Swarthmore College who has worked tirelessly to help end the genocide in Darfur. She speaks from experience, having endured the trauma of losing dozens of family members in the Rwandan genocide of 1994.

This event will be on Wednesday, November 7 at 7:00 pm at Miller Forum (Moyer Hall). For more information, call 484-668-3270 or email hillel@muhlenberg.edu.

November 7
Muhlenberg College
Miller Forum (Moyer Hall)
Allentown PA

This is not an Amnesty International event, but may be of interest to AI supporters.

NOTE: The time has been changed to 7:30 pm.

Speaker: Stephanie Nyombayire (Genocide Intervention Network)

Stephanie Nyombayire is a Rwandan student at Swarthmore College who has worked tirelessly to help end the genocide in Darfur. She speaks from experience, having endured the trauma of losing dozens of family members in the Rwandan genocide of 1994.

Co-sponsored by the Center for Ethics and Hillel. For more information, call 484-668-3270, or write hillel@muhlenberg.edu

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL GROUP #531
Draft Agenda
October 23, 2007—7 PM

  1. Sign in (and letter count), introductions, “pass the hat” for the facility
  2. Treasurer’s report; 2007 dues now due–$10/yr or what you can afford
  3. Local AI news—new volunteers “step up to the plate”
  4. Special Guest—April Zappaterrini, Eastern PA Area Coordinator
  5. Fund-raisers—Dorney Park recap and looking forward to Christmas at Barnes and Noble; Discussion of AIUSA Group Assessment
  6. Meetings with Senators—on CEDAW—Phyllis and Pilar
  7. Action on U.S. security contractors
  8. Mid-Atlantic Regional Conference (and AGM)—subsidies for attendees?
  9. ICM 2007 Decisions—Dan
  10. Letter for our POC—Rev. Bienvenido Samba, Equatorial Guinea
  11. (Almost) free postcards—(you have to add a little postage)
  12. Next meeting—12/25/2007—NOT! We need to discuss

Upcoming events
11/16-11/18—Mid-Atlantic Regional Conference, Baltimore, MD
11/26—Meeting of Group 347 (Bethlehem)
12/22-12/23—Gift-wrapping fundraiser at Barnes and Noble, Whitehall, PA (no experience necessary)
April/2008—AIUSA Annual General Meeting, Washington, DC

Thank you to Hans Wuerth for today’s Op-Ed piece about Amnesty’s Annual Report published earlier this year. As you all know, copies of the 2007 Annual Report were delivered to local libraries by Nancy Kelley, Ed Simons, Bob Glazer and Dan Laxar this summer. Today’s Op-Ed piece discusses the wide distribution of this violence against women. Karen Berry

To the Editor,

The June 28, 2007 the German weekly, Die Zeit, published an article on the growing problem of human trafficking in Europe. The article gave several specific examples. One woman, Natalia, from the country of Moldova, wrongly assumed that a household job awaited her in Istanbul that would pay 300 Euros per month. At the Istanbul airport, however, her male contact person was approached by another man who told Natalia that she would be working for him instead. Subsequently, she was forced into prostitution and “sold” six more times. Fortunately, her sister managed to locate her and to get her released.

Die Zeit also referred to a report by The Organization for International Migration. IOM estimated that between 600,000 and 800,000 human beings become victims of human trade each year, some 100,000 of whom are misled and abused in Western Europe. When I checked IOM’s website, I found the following assessment of human trafficking. “Migrant smuggling now matches drug trafficking as a major source of income for organized crime. Trafficking in human beings has become a significant and worldwide concern.”

It is not surprising that Amnesty International, in its 2007 Report on the State of the World’s Human Rights, states that “violence against women – in all societies around the world – remains one of the gravest and most common human rights abuses today.” According to AI, violence includes the trafficking of women and girls for purposes of sexual exploitation. It is a growing concern, and it occurs today in many parts of the world. AI includes statistics from the European Police Office, Europol, “that well over 1,000 women and girls were trafficked annually from Lithuania, primarily to western European countries.” “Trafficking of human beings, including of women and girls for forced prostitution in Europe, continued to thrive on poverty, corruption, lack of education and social breakdown. Trafficking of human beings in and to Europe was widespread.”

The AI Report lists other countries where the trafficking of women is persistent and out of control. Despite having ratified the Council of Europe’s Convention against Trafficking in Human Beings, Moldova still needs to do more to combat this problem. The UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women noted the “increasing trend of trafficking in young women and girls and the lack of protection for victims.” Another example: In China human trafficking remains pervasive despite strengthened laws and government efforts. “An estimated 90% of cases were women and children trafficked for sexual exploitation.”

In its 2007 Reports, AI lists specific human rights violations that target victims in numerous countries. Here is a short list of disturbing issues, among them arbitrary detention, abuses of detainees, police brutality, racism and discrimination, the recruitment and use of child soldiers, torture and ill-treatment of prisoners, violations of rights of indigenous people, discrimination against the Romani communities (Gypsies), lack of access to education, use of slave labor, and the retention in many countries of the death penalty. One problem mentioned again and again is the ongoing violence and discrimination against women.

In 2006 rapes of women by Janjaweed militias in Darfur remained systematic and unpunished. Women in eastern Chad suffered abuses, including rape, during attacks on villages. In Burundi “women of all ages were subjected to sexual violence” with a “very high incidence of rape cases.” Honor killings persisted in Jordan, Iraq, Syria and other states. “In Belarus, 2,736 women became victims of crime in the home. In Finland, 43.5% of women “were victims of physical or sexual violence or threats of violence by men.”

South of our border, the violence against women and gender discrimination remained “widespread throughout Mexico.” In Haiti, “women and girls continued to be tortured, raped and killed by illegal armed groups and individuals.” In Honduras last year, the “high levels of violence against women, children and young people persisted, with little effective government response.” Conditions appear even worse in Guatemala where 580 women were killed last year and 2,200 since 2001. According to still another story in Die Zeit (September 6), 380 women were murdered there so far this year. One Guatemalan human rights activist claimed that “the government is not interested in stopping this, which is why “only about 2% of these killings are solved.”

In her introductory essay, Irene Khan, Secretary General of Amnesty International, wrote that the lack of freedom for women is one of the major human rights concerns. Violence against women “thrives because of impunity, apathy and inequality… Billions of dollars are spent on fighting the ‘war on terror’ but where is the political will or the resources to fight sexual terror against women? There was universal outrage against racial apartheid in South Africa – where is the outrage against gender apartheid in some countries today?”

– Hans M. Wuerth

The Bethlehem and Allentown Groups encourage supporters to see the film “The Devil Came on Horseback,” showing October 7-13 at the 514 Theatre in Allentown.

“The Devil Came on Horseback” explains how Brian Steidle left the marines to look for a job and found a calling. As an observer for the African Union in the Sudan, Steidle spent six months watching as a nation consumed itself — as the Sudanese Arab-controlled government enacted systematic genocide against its black African citizens in Darfur.

Complete details here:

Film: The Devil Came On Horseback

October 7, 1:30, 4:30 and 7:30 pm
October 8, 7:30 pm
October 9, 7:30 pm
October 10, 7:30 pm
October 12, 8:15 pm
October 13, 5:00 and 8:15 pm
514 Theatre
514 North 19th Street, Allentown, PA

The Bethlehem Group encourages its supporters to see the film “The Devil Came on Horseback,” showing October 7-13 at the 514 Theatre.

“The Devil Came on Horseback” explains how Brian Steidle left the marines to look for a job and found a calling. As an observer for the African Union in the Sudan, Steidle spent six months watching as a nation consumed itself — as the Sudanese Arab-controlled government enacted systematic genocide against its black African citizens in Darfur.

On Sunday, October 7th at 1:30 pm, the film will be followed by a panel discussion.