Human Rights Collection drawn from Congressman Benjamin Gilman's Tenure as International Affairs Committee Chair

Item

Title

Human Rights Collection drawn from Congressman Benjamin Gilman's Tenure as International Affairs Committee Chair

Description

This project culls human rights papers and ephemera from Congressman Gilman's previously unpublished private collection. Correspondence is the strength of the collection including first person documents from political prisoners, their families and prominent world leaders revealing efforts to ameliorate their situations. Personal costs of internationally tense conflicts of Rufuseniks, Irish religious and political prisoners, Vietnam era conflicts in southeastern Asia, and State of Israel concerns are unveiled. The collection also depicts the Congressman's intimate and contentious involvement with Soviet and Easter Bloc leaders providing scholars with unique insight into American international relations. During his tenure, the Berlin Wall fell, East and West Germany reunited, and the Soviet Union fell. Gilman's interest in human rights is reflected in the papers offering a rich array of moments of historical significance such the Cambodian regime of Pol Pot; correspondence with Dalai Lama; the peace process in Ireland; attempts to find Missing In Action soldiers (MIAs); meetings with the Pope regarding the Blue Brigade, and work to overthrow the Communist regime in Poland with Solidarity leader Lech Walesa. Together, they provide unique insights into a pivotal point in American international relations and world history, helping scholars assess events that led to American's emergence as a superpower.

Date

Temporal Coverage

1973 - 2003

Spatial Coverage

While there are materials from all over the globe, this project will focus mainly on human rights efforts relating to the Soviet Union during the Cold War (Refuseniks); Vietnam and Southeastern Asia ��� predominantly POW and MIA issues; the State of Israel; Africa; Northern Ireland; Cyprus, and Cuba.

Extent

1700 cubic feet

Institution

Identifier

Primary Contact

Judy Osburn

Was Funded