3.1. Education to and for human rights and not 'teaching'
If by teaching we mean a traditional kind of didactic activity where one person only,
the teacher, has something to teach, while the rest (students) just have to listen and
learn, then human rights cannot be taught: one educates to human rights.
Human rights are not taught 'from above' top down or imposed.
One educates to human rights (from the Latin e-ducere), human rights are
transmitted and grasped, if by these words we consider that there is space for mutual
comparisons, dialogue and personal rethinking.
Human rights still seem to be a matter for people who sporadically shine (or
dishonourably so) in the media, to then disappear, locked up in the offices and
studies of philosophers and jurists.
Education to and for human rights has to get out of the restricted environment which
is the competence of jurists and lawyers without any interdisciplinary aspirations of
it becoming the heritage of all, the heritage of anyone who feels ready to open and
maintain an intercultural dialogue which draws its basis from human rights.
Education to and for human rights is an education to all levels in every social
context. Everyone, children, older youth, adults, can be educated to the ethical value
of human rights and their practical effects on social existence.
Everyone, even a child (think for example of so-called peer to peer education) can
become, in turn, an educator and promoter of human rights.
Education to human rights in the past (and sometimes today) was understood as an
education in civics which takes place in school.
This is an extremely limited and limiting perspective for at least four reasons:
a) too inwardly referring in terms of one's own context,
b) often reduced to a merely cognitive, theoretical, normative teaching of material
considered as the domain of juridical studies, where human rights teaching is
still anchored to norms and their content,
c) restricted to adults as the only ones able to reach children, adolescents,
d) limited to schooling.
Today much research has confirmed the limits of this traditional approach (civic
learning) based exclusively on knowing about political institutions and their history,
and proposes a much broader approach, socio-civic learning which is a stimulus to
practical experience, acceptance of responsibility and participation, an approach that
has so many elements in common with the Salesian style of education.
3.2. Interdisciplinary and holistic nature of education to and for human rights
Human rights, in fact, are not only matter for juridical and philosophical
consideration, but are interdisciplinary material. They can be taught and discussed
in school in the context of many subjects: history, geography, foreign languages,
literature, biology, music, economics.
Human rights should be an integral part of training and updating of teachers, so the
teachers themselves can be able to redevelop and mainstreaming human rights in a
multidisciplinary approach as a cross-curriculum leit motive in different subjects. But
that is still in the future somewhat and human rights continue, even at university
level, to be a specialized matter, rather than something cross-curriculum.
Education to human rights at the school level, then, though fundamental, does not
cover, nor can it ever cover, the multiplicity of possible ways for spreading a human
rights culture. NGOs, associations, oratories, social centres, youth centres can play a
key role in education to and for human rights.
- 8 - Congresso Internazionale “ Sistema Preventivo e Diritti Umani “ Roma, 2 – 6 Gennaio 2009