Present commitment
The question facing us today is to recognise the paths
along which this spirituality which we share is leading us. If opening schools
by the first communities of Brothers can be seen as putting into practice the
special concern for the poor, we must find an up-to-date means of putting our
commitment to the service of the poor through education into practice.
This is when the idea of human rights and especially
rights of children becomes visible. With the onset of the industrial society,
the idea of right appeared little by little and asserted itself. The
declaration of human and civil rights in 1789 followed by the drawing up of
Laws as well as the declaration of great Public Freedoms at the end of the XIXth
century are so many stages which marked the movement of codification of rights
and duties in France. The
peak of this movement was reached in 1948, with the creation of the UNO and the
proclamation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the first list of
human rights with universal appeal. This Declaration includes in particular, an
article 28, which states that all people have a right to social and
international order so that the present rights and freedoms can be applied.
The contents of the commitment would gradually become
precise: civil and political rights, economic, social and cultural rights,
collective rights. From the universal the commitment would be extended to the
regional level. It would take on more precise forms, better adapted to the
regional political cultures. Then, certain subjects would change to more
specialised commitments: fight against discrimination, fight against torture,
etc. Lastly, certain classes of people would gradually benefit from a special
protection, regarding their situation as potential victims: workers, victims of
armed conflict, women, and what concerns us, children. In 1989, the United
Nations proclaimed a Convention for the rights of the child. This was greeted
at the time as a major advance in human rights. This text is the culmination of
long preparatory work, in which the BICE (Bureau International Catholique de
l’Enfance) played an important part (cf. infra). It bears witness to the evolution of the
image of the child in society. In fact, “if the child as a weak human being to
be protected as bequeathed to us by the XIXth century is very present there,
the Convention shapes a completely different image of the child, that of the
future citizen, placed at the heart of a system of rights and responsibilities,
of practical citizens who foreshadow their adult life”.
The Convention had been
preceded by a first Declaration with five points (1924) entitled “Declaration
of Geneva”, then by a second Declaration with ten points in 1959, in which the
wording of a scarcely juridical right appeared, but which is very close to
Lasallian spirituality touched on above: the right to love. We can now pause a
while to call to mind the general dynamic of this Convention which allowed the
international right of the child to pass from a declaratory statute to a
binding one.
The Convention on the rights
of the child contains 54 articles and it is
intended to promote a truly legal statute of the child, itself promoted
to the level of subject of rights. The Convention affirms the basic principles,
among them being the right of the child
to a family, or the necessary taking into account of the higher interest of the child. We will come back later to these
two principles around which we can develop our proposals for new work. Beyond
these principles the Convention contains measures which bring a change of
perspective. The need for protection is no longer at the heart of the plan,
even though a certain number of rights in social, cultural, economic and penal
matters refer to it. The most salient innovations concern the measures relating
to fundamental freedoms: the child is recognised as having rights of opinion,
expression, thought and association.
The text, it is agreed,
breaks new ground by foreseeing a system of control of application. Article 43
of the Convention sets up a Committee of the rights of the child, charged with
examining the reports of States with regard to the measures of application
taken in the law of the country. These reports are examined and discussed by a
group of ten independent experts. The NGOs, with a consultative statute under
the United Nations, have the responsibility of producing alternative reports,
which “complete” (not to say contradict) state reports which are often too
flattering. This is the case with BICE for example. Taking into account the
importance given to participation of the NGOs at the heart of the Committee of
the Rights of the child in Geneva, the question of a specific presence of the
Brothers of the Christian Schools, who represent almost a million young people
in the world, becomes very pertinent.
|