Michigan Coalition for Human Rights
The Michigan Coalition for Human Rights (MCHR) was founded in 1980 and is led by Workers World Party leader, Abayomi Azikiwe.
History
Episcopal Bishop Coleman McGehee, Rabbi Richard Hertz, and Roman Catholic Bishop Thomas Gumbleton launched MCHR in December 1980 amid a growing conservative climate in religion and politics. While the religious "vox populi" had been "captured by the Moral Majority, and the voices of Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson advanced a narrow interpretation of the Bible", the election of President Ronald Reagan caused a more specific alarm over respect for human rights. "Those of us who were concerned about what we heard felt that we could speak with a more balanced perspective about the things the Moral Majority was saying," recalled McGehee. "We wanted a forum to discuss and act on racism, unemployment, sexism, militarism, and economic justice. Our core group of religious leaders contacted other religious, labor, community and business leaders from Detroit and the suburbs and decided to organize themselves."
"At that time, MCHR was a unique coalition -- from the outset the focus was on the religious community," recalled Tom Fenton, who served as MCHR's first full-time executive director from 1984 to 1990. "The timing was just right for the organization to take off." In the 1980s, many justice issues were in the forefront, and MCHR quickly made name for itself in the anti-apartheid movement. "We quickly took the leadership in Michigan and later we were recognized nationally as one of the leading grassroots anti-apartheid groups," Fenton said.
By 1984, the organization was providing information intended to discourage investment in South Africa, and encouraging guidelines protesting the sale of South Africa's Kruggerand gold coins. And MCHR emerged as a movement of people who found there were practical things we could do to fight apartheid," he said. Sister Joanette Nitz, of the Dominican order, joined the South Africa committee in 1985 and worked to further MCHR's opposition to apartheid in South Africa, and racism in the U.S. The committee grew dramatically, with several hundred attending events organized with other groups to sponsor speakers who had suffered torture and imprisonment because of their opposition to the apartheid government. As South Africa moved toward democracy, MCHR participated in the celebration of Nelson Mandela's visit to Detroit in July1993.
MCHR began to work on race relations in Detroit. The MCHR Freedom Tours took busloads of Detroit area students to civil rights sites in the South beginning in the summer of 1989 to teach young people about the history of racism and help them understand the civil rights movement through visiting historic landmarks. Organizers hoped the program would develop a generation of young leaders committed to working for racial justice in their communities and in the world. In the Tour's second year, the Detroit Free Press and Detroit News sent reporters and photographers on the bus with the students. "The organization was most visible during the time when the freedom tours were in full swing," said Charles Rooney, a member of the MCHR Board. "It was annual, involved children, and was a highly creative idea."
During the '90s, human rights looked more promising and there was less intensity. Still, MCHR continued to work and its sponsorship of Detroit's first environmental justice gathering in 1994 developed into the Coalition for Environmental Justice. A conference on sanctions against Iraq led to the creation of Metro Detroit Against Sanctions (MDAS), one of the leading national groups challenging U.S. policy against Iraq.[1]
Personnel
Board of Directors
The following served on the Board for the 2007 - 2008 period:[2]
- Abayomi Azikiwe, Chairperson, Wayne State University
- Dr. Brenda Bryant,Treasurer Marygrove College
- Rev. Harry Cook, Vicechair Episcopal Church - Clawson
- Frank Joyce, Vicechair UAW Ret.
- Margaret Alandt, IHM MOSES
- Dorothy Aldridge, Community Activist
- Imam Husahm Al-Husainy, Islamic Education Center, Dearborn
- Carolyn Apsey, Community Activist
- Russ Bellant, SEIU Local 19
- Rabbi Ernst Conrad, Temple Kol Ami (Ret)
- Dr. Jose Cuello, Wayne State University
- Dr. Jean Dietrick Rooney, Community Activist
- Katrina Fenton, WSU Student
- Al Fishman, Peace Action of Michigan
- David Fukuzawa, Kresge Foundation
- Trey Greene, Rotary International
- Karl Gregory, Professor Emeritus, Ret.
- Elena Herrada, Centro Obrero
- Dr. Gloria Aneb House, Univ of Michigan
- Dr. Shea Howell, Oakland University
- Vassilis Jacobs, Community Health Care
- Kerrie Kennedy, Law School Student
- Dr. Perry Mars, Wayne State University
- Rev. Stephen Marsh, Evangelical Lutheran Church
- Rt. Rev. Coleman McGehee, Jr., Ret. Episcopal Bishop
- Carrie Monnette, Detroit Province of the Jesuits
- Jeffrey Montgomery, Triangle Foundation
- Dr. Fred Pearson, Center for Peace & Conflict Studies, WSU
- Dr. Eugene Perrin, WSU Medical School Ret.
- Rev. Dr. Pamela Redding, Episcopal Church – Detroit
- Kim Redigan, U of Detroit Jesuit High School
- Dr. Mark Rigstad, Oakland University
- Dr. Charles Rooney, Community Activist
- Carry Smith-McGehee, Esq., Lawyer
- Kate Runyon, Triangle Foundation
- Dr. Francis Shor, Wayne State University
- Rudy Simons, Community Activist
- Rev. Dr. Carlyle Stewart III, United Methodist Church
- Erkeisha Terry, United Way Labor Office
- Dr. Prasad Venugopal, University of Detroit Mercy
- Bill Wylie-Kellerman, Episcopal Church
Staff
- Marge Sears, Coordinator
Advisory board
As at Feb. 11, 2011, the following served on the Advisory Board:[2]
- Rev. Dr. Charles Adams, Hartford Mem. Baptist Church
- Ishmael Ahmed, MI Dept. of Human Services
- Ron Amen Program Director for Arab American Museum
- Rev. Wendell Anthony, Fellowship Chapel United Ch. Of Christ
- Derek Blackmon, Outreach Director NAACP
- David Bonior, Reuther Labor Library, Wayne State Univ.
- Rosendo Delgado, Coordinator of Latinos Unidos
- Krysti Edmunds, Wayne State University
- Alicia Renee Farris, MI Institute for Nonviolence Education
- Rt. Rev. Wendell Gibbs, Episcopal Diocese of Michigan
- Rt. Rev. Thomas Gumbleton, Archdiocese of Detroit
- Louise Guyton, Vice President, Comerica Bank
- John E. Johnson, Jr., Corp. Counsel, City of Detroit
- Hon. Brenda Jones, Detroit City Council
- Rabbi Tamara Kolton, Birmingham Temple
- Rev. Dr.Daniel Krichbaum, Michigan Roundtable for Diversity and Inclusion (MRDI)
- Imam Radwan Mardini, American Muslim Center
- Hon. B. Pennie Millender, Esq. 35th District Court
- Hon. Claudia Morcom, Retired Judge
- Hon. Kathleen Straus, President, MI State Board of Education
- Bankole Thompson, Senior Editor of MI Chronicle
- Rev. Dr. Kevin Turman, Second Baptist Church
- Hon. JoAnn Nichols Watson, Detroit City Council
- Heaster Wheeler, Director Detroit NAACP
- Saundra L. Williams, President Metro Detroit AFL-CIO
Speakers' Bureau
As at Feb. 11, 2011, the following were members of the Coalition's Speakers' Bureau:[3]
- Jose Cuello, Wayne State University, Chicano-Boricua Studies
- Carrie Ann Monnette, Asst. for International Ministries, Detroit Province Society of Jesus
- Abayomi Azikiwe, Community Activist
- Imam Husham Al-Husainy, Karbala Islamic Education Center
- Frank Joyce, Community Activist
- Rudy Simons, Community Activist
- Bill Wylie-Kellermann, Pastor, St. Peter's Episcopal Church
- Fran Shor, Wayne State University
- Perry Mars, Wayne State University Africana Studies Dept.
- Fred Pearson, Wayne State University, Peace and Conflict Studies
- Marge Sears, MCHR Program Coordinator
- Mark Rigstad, Department of Philosophy, Oakland University
References
- ↑ MCHR about us, accessed Feb. 1, 2011
- ↑ Jump up to: 2.0 2.1 MCHR website, accessed Feb. 1, 2011
- ↑ MCHR website: The MCHR Speakers' Bureau (accessed on Feb. 11, 2011)