
Last modified: 2017-08-10 by ivan sache
Keywords: ligue des droits de l'homme | 
Links: FOTW homepage |
search | 
disclaimer and copyright | 
write us | 
mirrors
Flag of the LDH - Image by Ivan Sache, 21 April 2017
See also:
The Ligue des droits de l'Homme (LDH - Human Rights League; website) was established on 17 June 1898 by the lawyer Ludovic Trarieux (1840-1904) to defend Captain Alfred Dreyfus (1859-1935), a Jewish officer who had 
been wrongly convicted for treason. The Dreyfus affair ended in 1906 
with the complete rehabilitation of Alfred Dreyfus.
The association was officially registered on 5 July 1905 as the Ligue 
française pour la défense des droits de l'Homme et du citoyen, with 
LDH and Ligue des droits de l'Homme as its abridged names. Ran by a 
Central Committee, the LDH is organized in Sections, Regional 
Committees, and Departmental Federations.
The name of the association is a straightforward reference to the 
Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen, adopted on 26 
August 1789.
In the 1900-1920, the LDH campaigned for social justice and 
worker's rights. After the First World War, the LDH kept contact with 
the German and Belgian leagues to preserve peace, resulting in the 
establishment in 1922 of the Fédération internationale des Ligues de 
droits de l'Homme (FIDH). The LDH obtained the rehabilitation of 
several soldiers sentenced to death by War Councils.
In the 1930s, the LDH rallied the democratic and progressivist forces 
engaged in the struggle against fascism; the Pact of the leftist 
parties, unions and associations, which founded the Front Populaire 
alliance, was signed in 1935 in the headquarters of the LDH. The 
League was soon divided on the issue of rearmament, colonization, and 
support to Soviet Union; to maintain a broad alliance against Nazism, the LDH did not denounce the Moscow trials instigated by Stalin in 
1936-1938.
During the Second World War, the grounds of the LDH were occupied 
while its archives were transferred to Berlin - to be retrieved in 
2000 from Moscow, where the Red Army had brought them in 1945. Several 
of its leaders joined the anti-German resistance movements; at the 
end of the war, one third of the members of the Central Committee had 
been murdered or deported. President Victor Basch (1863-1944) and his 
wife Hélène (1862-1944) were shot in 1944 by the Milice française.
Reestablished with little institutional and political support and 
without significant membership renewal, the LDH focused its campaigns 
on decolonization and repression of human rights in the colonies 
during the 4th and 5th Republics, with special emphasis on the 
Madagascar insurrection (1947) and the Algerian War of Independence. 
The League was then joined by prominent members of anti-colonialist 
movements. After the proclamation of the 5th Republic, the LDH 
denounced the breaches to institution and civil rights, although 
several members of the Central Committee were also leaders of the 
Gaullist movement - such as René Cassin (1887-1976, Nobel Peace Prize 
1968; Léo Hamon (1908-1993) and André Philip (1902-1970).
The LDH established in 1977 Droits et libertés dans l'institution 
militaire (DLIM), a collective aimed at defend civil rights in the 
armed forces and campaigned for the legalization of contraception and 
abortion and the abolishment of the capital punishment and repressive 
laws. In the 1980-1990s, the LDH campaigned for the rights of foreign 
workers and the regularization of the status of illegal immigrants.
Among the famous presidents of the LDH are the philosopher and politician Ferdinand Buisson (1841-1932, Nobel Peace Prize 1927, shared with Ludwig Quidde), the physicist Paul Langevin (1872-1946), the politician Daniel Meyer (1909-1996, President of the Constitutional Council from 1983 to 1986), the journalist and historian Henri Noguères (1916-1990), and the lawyer Henri Leclerc (b. 1934).
Ivan Sache, 21 April 2017
The flag of the LDH (photo,
photo,
photo) is white with the organization's emblem, surrounded by the writing "Ligue / des / droits / de / l'Homme".
The emblem is made of a Liberty Cap with the scales of justice, in 
black, centered over the cockade.
Ivan Sache, 21 April 2017