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- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Subject: Menchu: Nobel a prize for all indigenous peoples
- Message-ID: <1992Dec20.034124.24611@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Date: 20 Dec 92 03:41:24 GMT
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
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- /** gen.nativenet: 409.0 **/
- ** Topic: NOBEL PRIZE: A prize for all indige **
- ** Written 6:19 pm Dec 13, 1992 by cscheiner in cdp:gen.nativenet **
- From: Charles Scheiner <cscheiner>
- Subject: NOBEL PRIZE: A prize for all indige
-
- /* Written 12:04 am Dec 13, 1992 by newsdesk@igc.apc.org in igc:ips.englibrary */
- /* ---------- "NOBEL PRIZE: A prize for all indige" ---------- */
- Copyright Inter Press Service 1992, all rights reserved. Permission to re-
- print within 7 days of original date only with permission from 'newsdesk'.
-
- Title: NOBEL PRIZE: A prize for all indigenous peoples
-
- oslo, dec 10 (ips/per-aslak ertresvaag) -- to 1992 nobel peace
- prize winner rigoberta menchu the honour she received thursday
- goes not to her -- but to indigenous peoples everywhere.
-
- ''i consider this prize, not as an award to me personally, but
- rather as one of the greatest conquests in the struggle for peace,
- human rights and for the rights of the indigenous people who,
- along all these 500 years, have been split, fragmented, as well as
- been the victims of genocide, repression and discrimination.''
-
- with these words the 1992 nobel peace prize winner, the 33- year
- old guatamalan maya indian campaigner opened her speech to a
- gathering of dignitaries at oslo city hall today. also present,
- the laureate's only surviving family, her sister and brother, rosa
- and nicolas menchu, and other guatemalan indians and friends.
-
- menchu said she felt ''a deep emotion and pride'' for the honour
- of having been awarded the prize and a ''deep personal feeling and
- pride for my country and its very ancient culture''.
-
- she added that the award of the peace prize reinforces and
- encourages continued denunciation of human rights violations,
- committed against the people in guatemala and worldwide.
-
- in his introduction, dr francis sejersted, chairman of the nobel
- peace prize committee, welcomed the laureate to ''a winter country
- in the far north, so far from your own country and your own world.
-
- ''the distance, both geographically and culturally is vast, but
- the occasion of this award, in particular, should prompt us to
- think nearness.'' for wherever they take place, conflicts are the
- world's concern. ''even at this distance we feel threatened by a
- local conflict in guatemala,'' he said, ''because it affects the
- world's future''.
-
- menchu described her country and the civilization of the mayas,
- pioneers in the field of mathematics, astronomy, agriculture,
- architecture and engineering, great artists in the field of
- sculpture, painting, weaving and carving.
-
- neither did she hide the sufferings, the sacrifices, the
- suppression and the atrocities endured in 500 years of european
- presence in america. but the indians' own spiritual vision had
- given them the strength to withstand it, to the point that today,
- finally, they can see ''some promising aspects,'' she said.
-
- ''i would describe the nobel peace price, in the first place as
- a tribute to the indian people who have been sacrificed and have
- disappeared because they aimed at a more dignified and just life
- with fraternity and understanding among human beings''.
- (end/ips/hr/pae/rj/92)
-
- ** End of text from cdp:gen.nativenet **
-