Morris Dees to speak at CU conference on religion and human rights

By Franklin Crawford

Morris Dees, founder and director of the Southern Poverty Law Center and a noted fighter against violent hate groups, will deliver the keynote address Wednesday, Nov. 8, at 7:30 p.m. in Cornell's Sage Chapel for a conference on religion and human rights. The talk is free and open to the public.

Dees' talk is one of the highlights of the conference, "Religion and Human Rights: Ideology, the Rhetoric of Hate and the Languages of Reconciliation," Nov. 8-11 on campus. Sponsored by the Cornell Religious Studies Program in collaboration with the Center for Religion, Ethics and Social Policy and Cornell United Religious Work (CURW), the conference focuses on the intersections of religious traditions and communities and the complex issues of human rights as a global concern. The conference will feature panels and workshops by scholars, activists, clergy and educators committed to genuine intervocational dialogue, from Cornell and from around the world.

Conference participants will have a choice of several panels to attend during each session as well as a series of five lectures titled "Perspectives on Human Rights," which will explore human rights issues through several major religious traditions. The conference is designed to allow ample opportunity for dialogue and interaction among attendees, with workshops and discussion sessions planned into each day's schedule.

Conference panels and lectures are open to the public, but registration is required by either accessing the conference web site at www.arts.cornell.edu/relst/index.html or by calling the CURW office at 255-4214. To see a full conference schedule, including a list of speakers and session locations, use either the web site or phone number above.

Conference participants will present case studies relating to four basic themes: the uses of religious ideology, language, scripture and imagery to further hate movements in the United States and around the world, in both contemporary and historical contexts; oppression of particular groups (religious, ethnic or gender defined), with a focus on the role of organized religion in fostering that oppression; religious communities formulating responses to religiously based hate movements; and effective responses and reconciliation efforts from within religious communities in the aftermath of human rights abuses.

Dees devotes much of his efforts to bringing law suits against violent white supremacist groups and developing ideas for Teaching Tolerance, the Southern Poverty Law Center's education project. The center distributes, free, Teaching Tolerance magazines and teaching kits that include two videos: "A Time for Justice," which won an Academy Award for best short documentary in 1991, and "The Shadow of Hate, a History of Intolerance in America," nominated for best short documentary in 1996. Dees has written an autobiography, A Season for Justice (Scribner's, 1991), and in 1992, Villard Books published his Hate on Trial, a chronicle of the $12.5 million judgment against white supremacist Tom Metzger and his White Aryan Resistance group charged in the beating death of a young black student in Portland, Ore. Dees' latest book, Gathering Storm: America's Militia Threat, exposes the dangerous increase of terrorist groups in America today. In 1991, NBC aired Line of Fire, a movie based on Dees' life.

November 2, 2000

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