APS April Meeting 2010
Volume 55, Number 1
Saturday–Tuesday, February 13–16, 2010;
Washington, DC
Session S5: Sakharov Prize
3:30 PM–5:18 PM,
Monday, February 15, 2010
Room: Thurgood Marshall West
Sponsoring
Unit:
DPF
Chair: Robert Cahn, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Abstract ID: BAPS.2010.APR.S5.1
Abstract: S5.00001 : Andrei Sakharov Prize Talk: Supporting Repressed Scientists: Continuing Efforts
3:30 PM–4:06 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Joseph L. Birman
(City College and City University of New York)
Some years ago, Max Perutz asked ``By What Right Do We Scientists
Invoke
Human Rights?" My presentation will start with mentioning
actions of
the international community which relate to this question. Such
action
as the creation in 1919 of the International Research
Council, and continuing on to the present with the UN sanctioned
International Council of Scientific Unions [ICSU], and other
Committees
such as those formed by APS, CCS, NYAS, AAAS which give support
to repressed scientists around the world now.
My own work has attempted to combine my individual initiatives
with work as a member and officer of these groups. Together with like
minded colleagues who are deeply affected when colleagues are
discharged
from their positions, exiled, imprisoned and subject to brutal
treatment,
often after mock ``trials", we react.
On visits in 1968 to conferences in Budapest, and then in 1969
to Moscow,
Tallin and Leningrad I became personally and deeply touched by
the lives
of colleagues who were seriously constrained by living under
dictatorships. I could move freely into and out of their
countries,speak
openly about my work or any other matter. They could not, under
penalty
of possibly serious punishment. Yet, I felt these people were like
my extended family. If my grandparents had not left Eastern
Europe for the USA in the late 189Os our situations could have
been reversed.
A little later in the 197O's, ``refusenik" and ``dissident"
scientists in
the USSR needed support. Colleagues like Andrei Sakharov, Naum
Meiman,
Mark Azbel, Yakov Alpert, Yuri Orlov and others were being
punished for
exercising their rights under the UN sanctioned international
protocals on
``Universality of Science and Free Circulation of Scientists".
Their own
governments [which signed these agreements] ignored the very
protections they had supported.
On frequent trips to the USSR during the 7Os,and 8Os I also seized
the opportunity for ``individual initiative" to help these
colleagues.
I asked for, and got, the opportunity to meet some high level Soviet
administrators such as vice President Velikhov of the Academy of
Sciences
as well as Laboratory directors, and pressed the cases of individual
scientists by name. This led to a memorable double existence.
During the
days I was an ``official guest" of the USSR, while in the evening
I would
visit colleagues who were fired ; on weekends I participated in
Refusenick ``Sunday" Seminars in an apartment in Moscow. This all
changed in 1991 with the end of communism in the USSR.
Unfortunatly various authorities in the new Russia still violate
the UN protocals and scientists there need support even now.
The need to continue both individual \& group mode of support
continues to the present, and now includes helping colleagues in
China, Cuba, Iran, the USA [Wen Ho Lee case],and other locales
around the world.
Intervention for Liu Gang [imprisoned in Beijing], Professor
Fang LiZhi, and others in China, the brothers Drs Allaei in
Iran, was and
is still necessary. In all these cases we must have reliable
information.
We publicize by direct contact with officials of the relevant
country.
And very important is that we press the U S government to
intervene. Even
the step of having a US official inquire about a repressed scientist
makes a difference. Judge Brandeis of the U S Supreme Court is the
attributed author of the saying that ``Sunlight is the best
disinfectant".
Sunlight on repression can help end it.
When Andrei Sakharov first visited New York at the Academy of
Sciences in 1988 he gave us advice which I paraphrase ``Keep
alert and
informed of violations of Human Rights everywhere and protest both
individually and together".
Scientific work has deep rewards when you discover a new aspect or
explanation for natural phenomena. Supporting repressed colleagues as
part of the fabric of scientific work adds another dimension. Namely
our satisfaction upon greeting Sakharov, Fang, and others and we
know that to some degree our efforts helped free them. This too
is an
answer to the Max Perutz question: our right is to help another
scientist
do his or her work, and to reap the reward of knowing we aided.
Contact information for the Committee of Concerned Scientists [CCS],
The APS Committee on International Freedom of Scientist [CIFS]
and other
groups efforts are easily obtained on the net.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2010.APR.S5.1