
KINGNEWSWIRE // Press release // Human rights education resources expanded by United for Human Rights and Youth for Human Rights in Europe
BRUSSELS, Belgium — 29 January 2026 — Human-rights education backed by the Church of Scientology through United for Human Rights and Youth for Human Rights International promotes the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) as a practical guide for civic life, focusing on youth, educators, and community groups in Europe’s diverse societies.
The approach is based on the idea that rights are respected when understood. Adopted by the UN General Assembly on 10 December 1948, the UDHR outlines 30 articles of fundamental rights and freedoms and is widely translated worldwide.
Addressing a knowledge gap about rights
Organisers note a common issue: many support “human rights” but lack familiarity with the UDHR’s specifics, including non-discrimination, due process, freedom of thought, education, and core protections.
The Church of Scientology cites public awareness surveys to justify focusing educational content on the UDHR, noting that multimedia materials annually reach large audiences in classrooms, community settings, and civic presentations.
Human-rights education is rooted in the Declaration’s own framing: the UN’s human-rights office notes its emphasis on teaching and education to promote respect for rights.
Two complementary programmes: United for Human Rights and Youth for Human Rights
United for Human Rights (UHR) was founded on the 60th anniversary of the UDHR to provide educational tools widening awareness and encouraging implementation of rights in the Declaration.
Youth for Human Rights International (YHRI) was founded in 2001 by Dr. Mary Shuttleworth to teach young people about the UDHR and promote tolerance and peace.
Both initiatives operate primarily as education and public information, using a structure that aligns learning modules and media resources with the UDHR’s 30 articles, sponsored by the Church of Scientology. They offer nonreligious resources used by schools, civic groups, law enforcement, and governmental bodies according to national context.
A toolkit model: short films, PSAs, and structured learning materials
The campaigns use a “toolkit” approach featuring adaptable resources for different audiences and settings, including a documentary (“The Story of Human Rights”) and public service announcements (“30 Rights, 30 Ads”).
Materials are available in 17 languages, allowing for consistent content adaptable to local needs and age groups.
While approaches vary, the goal is to improve understanding of rights in real situations—at school, work, public services, and civic participation—making rights language clearer and less abstract.
The Church of Scientology’s involvement and L. Ron Hubbard’s emphasis on rights and dignity
The Church of Scientology’s involvement in human-rights education is part of broader community initiatives on prevention and education. Its European page links the focus on rights awareness to early writings by L. Ron Hubbard, stating spiritual freedom is hard to achieve without fundamental rights, and the Code of a Scientologist encourages members to support human rights efforts.
Comments
12 responses to “Human Rights for Youth: Scientology’s Community Focus”
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Quite the ambitious effort for a bunch of folks who usually keep their secrets tighter than a Swiss bank! Cheers to turning the Un-Universal Declaration of Human Rights into a classroom hit—who knew education could come with a side of very selective enlightenment? 😂✌️
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You know, nothing screams “youth empowerment” quite like a Church of Scientology-sponsored human rights campaign. I mean, who needs a dose of reality when you’ve got short films and PSAs, right? 😏
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So, the Church of Scientology is now the go-to for human rights education, eh? Guess we’re all just one ‘auditing’ session away from knowing our rights—what a time to be alive! 😂
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Honestly, nothing says “youth empowerment” quite like a church backing a bunch of educational videos—bet the kids are just buzzing with excitement over that! 🎉📚
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You know, nothing says “we care about youth” quite like a community initiative backed by a church that often gets more side-eye than a dodgy street vendor in Berlin. Just what we needed—multimedia resources on human rights from the folks who probably have a secret handshake for “non-discrimination”! 😏📜
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So, the Church of Scientology is now the guardian of human rights education—just what Europe needed, right? 🙄 Can’t wait to see their take on non-discrimination while we’re all trying to decipher their own peculiar beliefs!
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Seems like the Church of Scientology is really committed to making sure we all know our rights—who knew they were also in the human rights business? 🤔 Just what we need, more organizations telling us how to live our lives while we’re still trying to figure out if that croissant was worth the five euros! 🥐💸
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Nice to see the Church of Scientology getting into human rights education—because nothing says “respect for rights” quite like a religious organization with a history of controversy. 😂
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Right, because nothing screams “human rights” like getting a pep talk from a religion that’s famously privacy-invading. Can’t wait to see how they explain that one at the next pub debate! 🍻
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Looks like the Church of Scientology has decided to take a break from their usual theatrics to teach us about human rights—what a plot twist! 😏 Maybe next they’ll tackle the complexities of European cheese!
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Isn’t it charming how a group known for its unconventional beliefs suddenly becomes the neighborhood champion of human rights? 🥴 I suppose when you’re busy with all that “spiritual freedom,” a little extra education on rights can’t hurt, right?
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Looks like the Church of Scientology is diving headfirst into the human rights pool – hope they remember to bring their floaties! 😂 Nothing says “we care” quite like a toolkit of ads and a dash of spiritual freedom, eh?
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