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About
the Lutheran Office for World Community
(LOWC)
Advocating for
Human Rights
Introduction
History of the Lutherans and Human Rights
Monitoring Human Rights Mechanisms
Fast Facts about the Lutheran World Federation
Introduction
In a world of increasing global cooperation, the Lutheran Office for
World Community (LOWC) has an exciting role, monitoring the work of
the UN on behalf of the
Lutheran World Federation and the ELCA. The
Lutheran World Federation
(LWF) is one of more than 4,000 non-governmental organizations
registered with the United Nations. LWF headquarters in Geneva,
Switzerland monitors human rights, primarily at the United Nations
office there, and coordinates Lutheran field programs through the
Department for World Service. In New York, the Lutheran Office for
World Community acts as liaison to UN headquarters for the LWF,
following issues such as human rights, humanitarian crises,
HIV/AIDS, the status of women and Israel-Palestine.
History of the Lutherans and Human Rights
From the very beginnings of the UN, Lutherans have been present.
During the drafting of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in
1940’s, the Rev. O. Frederick Nolde, a professor of education at the
Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia, participated under
the auspices of the World Council of Churches. He collaborated
closely with Eleanor Roosevelt to draft Article 18 on the right to
freedom of thought, conscience and religion. Lutherans have been
represented at UN headquarters in New York since the early 1960s.
Initially volunteers did the work under the auspices of the National
Lutheran Council, but in 1973 the first director of LOWC, the Rev.
Edward C. May, was hired by the Lutheran Council in the USA and the
USA National Committee for the LWF to undertake representation on a
full-time and compensated basis.1
During his eleven-year tenure, Dr. May focused his efforts on
advancing the cause of Namibia’s independence, but also took up
other human rights situations and the promotion of economic justice.
He did this at a time when few others did so and many did not even
know where Namibia was. However, his efforts as well as those of his
successor, Ralston H. Deffenbaugh, Jr. (1985-90) (now President of
Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Services), were instrumental in
raising awareness of the illegal occupation and apartheid policies
of the South Africa government among Lutherans in the U.S. and
beyond. One would be remiss, however, not to acknowledge several
other areas where Lutherans made major contributions to advancement
of human rights within the United States. Beginning in the late
1940s and early 1950s, U.S. Lutherans cooperated with the LWF in
resettling post-war refugees within the U.S. (This work evolved into
the present-day Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Services.) Some
Lutherans, such as the Rev. Will Herzfeld, were deeply involved in
the civil rights movement, starting in the late 1950s and 1960s, to
end racial discrimination and related economic oppression of
African-Americans.
Often these involvements in defending human rights proved quite
controversial within and outside the Lutheran church. One noteworthy
example was that of the Rev. Paul Boe, a Lutheran pastor, who was
invited by the leaders of the American Indian Movement to join them
at Wounded Knee, SD, in 1973 during their standoff with federal
authorities at the Indian reservation. His solidarity with Native
Americans and maintenance of clergy confidentiality in a subsequent
federal judicial proceeding led to his resignation the following
year from the national staff of the American Lutheran Church. The
wars in Central America during the 1980s were also instances where
Lutherans became human rights defenders. Bishop Medardo Gomez of the
Lutheran Synod of El Salvador provided refuge and pastoral support
to hundred of persons displaced during that nation’s civil war. His
courageous stands resulted in death threats and disruption of his
work. That work continued, however, supported by LWF staff persons,
Mary Solberg and Phil Anderson, who persevered under difficult
personal circumstances as well on behalf of the Salvadoran people.
The LWF subsequently became involved in bringing together the
warring parties in Guatemala, the opposition Guatemalan National
Revolutionary Unity (URNG) and the government, into indirect and
later direct contacts that ultimately led to the signing of the
Peace Accords of December 1996. The LWF General Secretary, the Rev.
Gunnar Stålsett and the Assistant General Secretary, the Rev. Paul
Wee, persisted in keeping the parties talking with one another and
helped them develop sufficient mutual trust so that negotiations
were possible and the peace agreements reached, ending more than 30
years of civil war. (See also From Federation to Communion,
Jens Holger Schjørring, Prasanna Kumari and Norman A. Hjelm,
editors, Augsburg Fortress, Minneapolis, 1997, pages 342-343).2
In the late 1970s and into the next two decades, Lutheran
churches and their cooperative entities, such as the USA National
Committee, promoted the ratification by the U.S. of most of the
major UN human rights covenants and conventions. There was
involvement with other Christian bodies, such as the National
Council of Churches of Christ in the USA and the United States
Catholic Conference, as well as pan-Jewish organizations and human
rights groups in advocacy on behalf of the U.S. becoming a state
party to these important documents such as the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. This work was affirmed with
the adoption in 1995 of the ELCA social statement "For Peace in
God’s World", which drew attention to the importance of the
promotion and protection of human rights to world peace. Over the
years, Lutherans have been encouraged to both support ratification
of these treaties as well as write to their elected officials on
behalf of persons held in detention by oppressive regimes. In
addition, U.S. Lutherans participated in the LWF delegation that
attended the World Conference on Human Rights in 1993 in Vienna.
Today, LOWC continues to collaborate with other Lutheran church
offices, such as the Washington (DC) Office of the ELCA in making
appeals to the Department of State on behalf of detainees and
prisoners, the LWF Office for International Affairs and Human Rights
(IAHR) in Geneva in monitoring the compliance of states parties to
international human rights conventions, and the ELCA Corporate
Social Responsibility program as it advocates for the protection of
human rights in the context of major companies and corporations
working worldwide. LOWC also has been assisting the IAHR in
monitoring discussions in New York under the umbrella of UN reform,
including the creation of the Human Rights Council and the
Peacebuilding Commission.
All of these activities indicate both adjustments within a
shifting international context and sustained commitment to
maintaining international human rights standards and norms routed in
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights adopted in 1948.
Monitoring Human Rights Mechanisms
In partnership with Lutheran World Federation (Geneva), LOWC
monitors human rights treaty bodies at the UN in New York, such as
the Committee on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination
against Women (CEDAW) and the Human Rights Committee. LWF recently
scaled up its international human rights reporting in partnerships
with local churches and programs, launching the website:
http://www.lwf-humanrights.org/ . Over ninety percent of the
members of the United Nations -185 countries- are party to the
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against
Women. Typically, the CEDAW committee meets two or three times a
year, whereupon countries that have ratified the conventions submit
periodic reports providing evidence of positive movement in human
rights. After the country presents its report, unofficial or
"shadow" reports are presented by NGOs, and independent experts ask
questions directly to the government. The questions might be about
the enforcement of anti-discrimination laws, status of ethnic
groups, levels of violence, or access to education. The CEDAW and
the Human Rights Committee are unique within the UN processes,
because countries must answer direct questions from experts on the
spot -- a stark contrast to UN meetings replete with prepared
speeches. In February 2006, Venezuela was reviewed by the CEDAW
committee, and the government presented a glowing report on the
increased access for women to social services. Based on reports from
Virginia Iváñez, a Venezuelan committee member of the LWF Program
Committee for International Affairs & Human Rights, LOWC submitted a
shadow report on behalf of LWF. According to her report, there are
many laws protecting women from violence, however they are rarely
enforced. Using the evidence of the LWF report, one of the
independent experts asked the government to comment on how many
actual arrests were made of women abusers. The government responded
that a sexual harassment lawsuit was a pending example of
eliminating employment discrimination against women. However, the
unanswered question remains on the UN record. After a treaty body
committee session concludes, LOWC sends reports on the meeting’s
conclusions to churches and field service programs which work in
that country. By sharing the commitments the governments have made
at the UN, national churches and programs can use them in advocacy
efforts to hold governments accountable for their promises.
Click here for a map of 2005 LWF membership statistics Fast Facts about the Lutheran
World Federation
- The Lutheran World Federation (LWF) has over 66.2 million
members
- The LWF now has 140 member churches in 78 countries all over
the world
- The LWF has offices dedicated to: Humanitarian Assistance,
Global HIV/AIDS Campaign, Mission & Development, Theology, General
Secretariat Activities, International Affairs & Human Rights,
Ecumenical Relations, Communication Services, Finance and
Administration, and Personnel.
- The LWF President is the Rev. Mark S. Hanson, presiding bishop
of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA). The Rev.
Ishmael Noko is the LWF General Secretary.
1 Rev. Philip A. Johnson, "Lutheran
Advocacy at the International Level" in The Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America and Public Policy Advocacy: Papers from a
Consultation, 1990. 2 For an
overview of LWF involvement in human rights from the First to the
Eighth Assemblies see LWF Today, 1/94, March 1994, pp. 7-8. |