I recently attended a dedication ceremony at The Dodd Center for Human Rights at the University of Connecticut.
I recently attended a dedication ceremony at The Dodd Center for Human Rights at the University of Connecticut where President Biden addressed a new generation of activists, students and faculty. The President shared a deeply personal message about the importance of public service while honoring the Dodd family who have been close friends and political allies for decades.
The event commemorated the 75th anniversary of the Holocaust and the President invoked the consequences of ignoring hate speech, lies and violence by remembering his father, a devout Catholic, telling his children at the dinner table that the Nazi trains bearing people to certain annihilation in death camps should have been bombed at the start of the war as soon as the allies knew of the final solution. He taught his children that “silence is complicity.”
The day was sunny and long lines waited for their chance to hear and see the President. When I left my room in the morning to walk over, I was stopped four times by state and campus police who had set up a large perimeter to keep the Presidential entourage safe. Details of the actual start time were kept to the last minute, people had lined up hours early as if waiting to see their favorite celebrity.
Demonstrators vied with heavy secret service presence as we waited to enter. They chanted slogans and denounced the Biden record on a collection of issues: water sovereignty, immigration policy, Haiti, statehood for Puerto Rico and vaccine mandates. There were drive-by trucks trolling Trump flags, fife and drum corps and lots of home-made signs.
The President arrived in one of five enormous helicopters landing on the roof of a parking garage a few hundred yards away. It was very impressive, the crowd watched silently and in awe. It was a reminder that the office of the Presidency carries more than just its occupant.
At times, the loud protests made me angry. They got in the way of the idealism I wanted to feel for a few hours. But in his remarks, President Biden reminded all of us that however imperfect America has been, our democracy is one nation built on the toil and hope of everyone who comes here.
The President warned that today there are fewer functioning democracies in the world than at any time in the past 15 years, with a rise of authoritarianism, demagoguery, racism and the violent suppression of human rights spreading.
The Dodd Center for Human Rights contains the collection of letters and papers of Thomas Dodd who served as the Executive Trial Council for Nazi Criminality at Nuremberg in 1945-46.
At the end of World War II, with 20 million people dead and 6 million Jews deliberately murdered by the Nazi’s, Prime Minister Winston Churchill suggested the 20 high level defendants (Nazi generals and leaders) be lined up and summarily executed. Stalin wanted a brief show trial and executions, but U.S. Supreme Court Justice Peter Jackson had hired Thomas Dodd who had spent 15 months in Europe documenting the genocide and violations of human rights by the Nazi’s and together they argued successfully for a full War Crimes Tribunal. The 20 men who stood trial at Nuremberg were forced to listen to extensive testimonies as a full record was created of their barbarism.
Thomas Dodd felt that the world deserved a record of what had happened, that truth coupled with accountability would set an important precedent for generations to come by establishing an international legal framework for bringing to justice those who disregard the human rights of others. It is this same animating idea that has led to the creation of the International Court of Criminal Justice administered through the United Nations that has brought dictators and genocidal criminals to justice.
Truth, accountability, empathy and service, these are fundamental to the functioning of our democracy and these are the values that define human rights for the next generation. The President called on UConn students to engage with the world and to put their skills and educations to work for others.
I have my own history with the Dodd Center, having donated a library of child labor photos and videos that were the product of my 30-year filmmaking partnership with journalist and photographer Robin Romano. As I sat in the audience, surrounded by UConn students who have come to the university from all over the world, I saw the hope and determination in their eyes as the President spoke. The President’s natural empathy for others ran like a current through the day. It was touching and it renewed my spirit and commitment to the work of protecting children’s rights.
Len Morris is co-founder of Media Voices for Children. He lives in Vineyard Haven.

Comments
Silence isn’t necessarily
John Aldeborgh KatamaSilence isn’t necessarily complicity, it’s a lovely idea but entirely impractical. There are literally billions of issues in the world and each requires data, consideration and judgment. All impact peoples lives and all are important to some constituency. Add to that the fact that the majority of people are consumed by the struggle to survive, life is a hard uphill battle for most of the world. A handful of academics and the political class have the luxury of money and time to pass judgment on the rest of us who have dedicated our lives to providing education and values to our children. This in my mind is a far better investment that activism. Most activists are unqualified, either by age or experience to accurately judge what is best for people they don’t know and likely don’t understand.
Len, thanks for the gift of
Gerald EdgartownLen, thanks for the gift of reporting on this event....in the midst of all the battles over democracy going on now, to find this beacon of hope gives a real lift....Thx...Gerald
Excellent call to action, but
Chip Coblyn OBExcellent call to action, but I fear we are two renegade votes away from extinction as a functional democracy, while an entire renegade party takes a jackhammer to our foundations—all right under the president’s nose.
This is an exquisitely
Nancy Moskow Old Lyme CTThis is an exquisitely written piece. Your coverage of Biden at UConn, along with the history of Thomas Dodd, highlights the importance of maintaining the strong heart of this country’s democracy. Thank you!
Len:Thank you for this
Susan DIckler West TisburyLen:Thank you for this beautifully written piece. You are highly qualified to write about optimism and activism as one who has studied and documented child labor issues for much of your adult life. Keep filming, keep writing, keep caring.
Len, that is a wonderful and
Alida O’Loughlin Oak BluffsLen, that is a wonderful and important piece of writing you did. You are translating for us a sense of optimism, an ability to believe in and act upon the good things, right for this world. We lost that sense while drowning in the dulling negativism that seems to have taken over in the country. Your letter reminds me of the fact that there remains another way to go! Thank you.
Len, As i was reading aloud
Eleanor Stanwood West TisburyLen, As i was reading aloud to our family i felt as though I was one of the Freshman UConn students in the audience..
Thanks for renewing my youthfilled spirit of activism within me.. still drying my tears.
I hope this essay is read out
Trip Barnes vhI hope this essay is read out loud to the new civics class at the MVRHS...
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