UNESCO, ILO UNDP AND UNICEF LAUNCH A JOINT MESSAGE ON OCCASION OF WORLD
TEACHERS’ DAY (October 5, 1998)
Paris, September 30 {No.98-209} - On the occasion of World Teachers’ Day (October 5),
a joint message has been launched by UNESCO Director-General, Federico
Mayor; Michel Hansenne, Director-General of the International Labour
Organization; James Gustave Speth, Administrator of the United Nations
Development Programme (UNDP); and Carol Bellamy, Executive-Director of the
United Nations Childrens’ Fund (UNICEF).
Here is the full text of the message:
“Teachers as peace builders shape the future”
“Building the foundations for peace is as much a challenge for teachers as
it is for those who sign peace treaties. Conflict resolution and the
implementation of peace settlements feature regularly in the news, but
today on World Teachers' Day, we should ask ourselves how much such peace
efforts would achieve without the unheralded contribution of the world's 50
million peace teachers? Day after day and year after year, teachers build
the very fabric of peace. They transmit the knowledge, values and
attitudes, the skills and behaviour which ensure that peace is not just the
absence of conflict but becomes a way of life for all, putting into daily
practice the concept that social justice is essential to universal and
lasting peace.
Millions of children across the world today live in a climate of violence.
Millions have experienced the horrors of full-scale conflict; others suffer
exploitation as child labourers or other forms of abuse. Everywhere
children are arriving at school having already learnt the language of
aggression. Over and above their class work, teachers increasingly find
they have to resolve problems of bullying and harassment. They deal with
the symptoms of trauma and instill a co-operative atmosphere where
differences can be resolved through dialogue.
In schools where children replicate the tensions and divisions of the
world outside, teachers have to help their pupils to learn the importance
of making informed decisions, of thinking critically and of minimising
differences in order to live together in harmony. Each time a teacher
succeeds in creating a tolerant, supportive classroom environment, each
time a teacher enables children to develop their self esteem, their
communication skills and ability to solve problems, a fundamental act of
peace building takes place.
Today, we pay special homage to the efforts of teachers who engage in this
aspect of their work, most often without the benefit of specific training,
counselling, workshops or reference materials. They perform this often
unnoticed and yet vital function of peace building in spite of all the
problems of low status and low pay, inadequate resources and poor working
conditions. But praise is not enough! It is unacceptable that those who
fill one of the most crucial and central roles in our society do not
receive greater support. We must ask ourselves what we can do to ensure that conditions for teachers improve substantially. Appropriate class sizes,
better teacher training and career advancement, salaries comparable to
those of other similarly qualified professionals, access to up to date
teaching materials and new information technologies, are essential priorities.
The ILO/UNESCO Recommendation concerning the Status of Teachers remains a
benchmark in this respect. There is a growing global concern for poverty
eradication: it must give priority to the role of education and put
teachers at the heart of social reconstruction. Teachers must now become
active partners in the planning of education and education systems, in
accordance with the rights set out in international labour standards on
freedom of association and collective bargaining.
On this fifth World Teachers' Day, we appeal to the world community, to
governments, parliamentarians, municipalities, the media, business
communities, parents and community leaders to give teachers the support
they need and acknowledge the essential role they play. It is often said
that conflict is, at root, a problem of learning. If we invest in the
process of learning and in teachers, who shape the future, then we will
begin at last to invest fully in peace and in a better future for all the
world's children.
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