Showing posts with label human rights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label human rights. Show all posts

Tuesday, 23 February 2016

Do we take our right to vote for granted?

Suffragette was a film that made me think about how easy it is to take for granted what we have when others have fought for it in the past.  A friend of mine suggested that all people turning 18 should watch this film so that they understand the sacrifice that others have made to gain the vote.  Not a bad idea, if perhaps difficult to execute without it becoming ironically patronising. 




‘The vote’ is so much more than a vote for a particular government, although this is clearly its fundamental meaning. Having a say in the government and therefore the type of society we choose to live in is clearly a critical human right.   When I say ‘much more than’, I mean that the vote represents having a place in society, a franchise to exercise a form of choice, rather than being controlled and impotent.  For the women (and men) of the suffragette movement, this need for enfranchisement was a fight for the fundamental right to be treated equally, with dignity, rather than as a chattel, a possession or a pawn of others (men). The civil rights movement was a similar struggle for enfranchisement in America, and the anti-apartheid movement was a local and worldwide push for equal standing for all people in South Africa, instead of the oppression of the majority by the powerful (white) minority. 

In all of these struggles we see individuals making incredible sacrifices, such as the mother losing her son and her marriage in Suffragette, and the aggregate impact of these individuals creating a force for change in society at large.  And yet a few years later we are at risk of taking these changes for granted.  To do so we dishonour those individuals who felt so strongly about the injustice that they were willing to sacrifice everything in order to create change for those that would come later.  We owe it to them to never forget.