Peter
Benenson was a British lawyer who helped create Amnesty International in 1961.
Today, Amnesty International is the world's largest human rights organizations
with nearly 2 million members in 64 countries. Amnesty International's success
helped spawn human rights organizations all around the world, so that today there
are more than 1000 local, national and international organizations working to
protect human rights. Peter Benenson's involvement in advocating human rights
began while he was sitting on the London subway reading the evening paper about
2 Portuguese students who were sentenced to 7 years in prison for toasting to
freedom. He was outraged and tried to think about how to help them. Instead of
rushing off by himself to the Portuguese embassy to complain, he decided to find
a way to get lots of people to speak out about it. He created an Appeal to Amnesty
which was picked up by newspapers all around the world asking for the release
of the students, and it generated thousands and thousands of letters in a short
time. This simple tool grew and spread and was a major force in helping to mobilize
'civil society' to have tremendous power for change, when organized into coordinated
worldwide campaigns.