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News Release

For Immediate Release:   Novemeber 12, 2002
Media Contact: Suellen Bilow (415) 557-4282
Catherine King (415) 557-4211




San Francisco Public Library Presents
Inspiring stories from Human Rights Defenders
Harry Wu, Sister Dianna Ortiz, Van Jones

In Person: Saturday Dec 14 at SF Main Library

San Francisco - Harry Wu, Sister Dianna Ortiz and Van Jones will be guest speakers during a special program, "Inspiring Stories from Human Rights Defenders," on Saturday, December 14 at 3:00 pm, in San Francisco Main Library's Koret Auditorium, 100 Larkin Street, Civic Center.  This public program, co-sponsored by Amnesty International and the Center for Justice and Accountability, coincides with the anniversary of the December 1948 signing of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The program will be followed by a reception in the Latino/Hispanic Community Meeting Room. 

Van Jones, Sister Dianna Ortiz and Harry Wu are among 51 human rights defenders from around the world whose portraits and inspiring stories also are included in "Speak Truth to Power," an exhibition of powerful black-and-white photographs taken by Pulitzer Prize-winning photo- journalist Eddie Adams. The exhibition opens at San Francisco Main Library's Jewett Gallery earlier in the week on December 12 and continues through February 23, 2003.

The opening program will feature inspiring stories of women and men around the world who stand up to oppression at great personal risk in the nonviolent pursuit of human rights.

  • Sister Dianna Ortiz, an American nun tortured by Guatemalan security forces, is the executive director of the Torture Abolition and Survivors Support Coalition (TASSC).

  • Harry Wu survived two decades in Chinese prison camps. As director and one of the founders of the Laogai Research Foundation, he is the foremost critic of the Chinese Laogai labor camp system.

  • Van Jones is the National Executive Director of the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, an organization that challenges human rights abuses in the U.S. Criminal system.

Human rights issues - from nuclear disarmament to children in war, from environmental activism to religious self-determination and sex-slavery - are examined in the exhibition text through biographical stories about each of the defenders written by veteran human rights leader Kerry Kennedy Cuomo.

The exhibit is based on the book, Speak Truth to Power by Kerry Kennedy Cuomo with photographs by Eddie Adams. The traveling exhibition, organized by Nan Richardson of Umbrage Editions in New York, debuted in September 2000 at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, DC and has traveled to other venues including Boston Public Library, Columbia University, Northwestern University's Dittmar Memorial Gallery, the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis and most recently the Toledo Public Library. Following its showing at San Francisco Public Library, "Speak Truth to Power" will travel to the Museum of Photographic Arts in San Diego and then internationally through 2006.

All programs and exhibitions at the Library are free of charge and open to the public.

The San Francisco exhibition of "Speak Truth to Power: Human Rights Defenders Who Are Changing Our World" and related programs are supported by the Friends & Foundation of the San Francisco Public Library.


For more information, please call (415) 557-4277.


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