Nationwide Truth Commissions
A WIN FOR WEAP, A WIN FOR OUR MOVEMENT!
WEAP’s May 15th, 2008 Truth Commission & Public Hearing on Health Care held at Oakland’s St. Mary’s Center was a success! We give special thanks to all of you who poured out your hearts to make it work: the co-sponsors, endorsers, volunteers, and participants. For more information, read our 2008 Truth Commission Summary or watch Part I and Part II of WEAP's Truth Commission Video on You Tube!
Dr. Sal Sandoval speaking during the teach-in component of the May 2008 Oakland Truth Commission.
Credit: Austin Long-Scott
WHAT ARE TRUTH COMMISSIONS?
Truth Commissions are designed to expose the truth when powerful forces would rather keep it hidden. They allow masses of poor people who are normally ignored, silenced, and made invisible to speak out and be seen and heard. There are more Truth Commissions than you might think. Perhaps the best known is South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission, set up in the mid-1990s to reveal the true agonies of Apartheid. At least 17 countries have used them to help different groups coexist after years of conflict. Today, they are seen as integral to the peace and healing process of most international conflicts.
In the United States, truth commissions have been held in cities across the country in the last few years to highlight the horrors that poverty causes for millions of U.S. residents every day. The Poor People’s Economic Human Rights Campaign (PPEHRC), Healthcare NOW, the Women’s Economic Agenda Project (WEAP), and many other US based organizations have embraced the mechanism of the truth commission in their struggles to attain social and economic justice for all. WEAP uses this format with its international origins in order to show how poverty violates internationally sanctioned human rights standards. When used in this way, truth commissions demonstrate the growing gap between wealth and poverty in America and the urgent necessity to take action now to address this injustice.
Truth commissions have also acted like a trial, indicting the government for the human rights abuses it continues to permit, while also appealing to the offices of local, state, and national policymakers to join in seeking affirmative solutions. Thus, many of the hearings have included the representation of a local congressperson in a grassroots effort to have the plight of poor people addressed in their very own backyards rather than in Washington D.C. Oakland participated in this broad movement for truth when the Women's Economic Agenda Project (WEAP), along with congresswoman Barbara Lee, hosted our first Truth Commission on the Health Care Crisis in 2006 and again recently in 2008.

CA PPEHRC tent at the 2007 US Social Forum in Atlanta, Georgia.
Credit: Heather McLaughlin
RAISING AWARENESS, FASHIONING SOLUTIONS
Truth commissions have become a key part of the social and economic justice work that we do because they help build the movements for poverty elimination and health justice. They are an efficient way to document economic human rights violations because they record the stories of the millions of people in this country "who have been downsized, outsourced, cut off of the welfare rolls, evicted, denied health care, and gone without food for their families."
These stories break the isolation that makes people feel alone, ashamed, and blame themselves for their suffering, rather than inadequate and corrupt systems. The widening gap between rich and poor is greatly expanding the numbers of poor, low-income, and uninsured people. That is why WEAP made it clear at our truth commission that, "We are doctors, nurses, homeless families, women in recovery, foster youth, low-income seniors, low-wage workers, public employees, mothers, sons, and grandparents, and we hold our government responsible to take care of it’s people!"
Truth commissions also educate and raise political consciousness. They allow many people to become familiar with and aware of the economic human rights framework that guarantees everyone their basic needs. They let people know the facts about what causes poverty and what keeps it from being eliminated. By letting our communities and the world know about this suffering, truth commissions have become the arenas where real, affirmative solutions to these problems are fashioned and where a new vision for a more just world is demanded.
Carolyn Milligan gives her testimony with the help of Janine Grantham at the March 2006 Oakland Truth Commission.
Credit: Austin Long-Scott
TESTIMONIES: SPEAKING TRUTH TO POWER
The statements found on the side bar to the right are just a sampling of the testimony that has been generated across the country at truth commissions focused on the health care crisis. Each individual’s story has exposed health care violations while adding insight to the movement for a single payer and Universal coverage health care system.
"We, the poor, jobless, downsized, uninsured victims of welfare reform and others abused by the institutions of domination are no longer silent. We are moving forward with the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Fannie Lou Hamer, and so many freedom fighters to improve the lives of Americans."
-Portia Anderson, WEAP

Upcoming Events
| 03/01/10 | Health/Human Rights Learning Circle |
| 03/10/10 | Budget Advocacy Planning Session |
| 03/11/10 | Strength in Debate Part II |
| 03/25/10 | Economics as if People Matter |
| 04/04/10 | March to Fulfill the Dream |
| 04/10/10 | Changing the Workplace, Changing the World! |
| 06/22/10 | The U.S. Social Forum II |

