27 episodes

Hosted by Lantos Foundation President, Dr. Katrina Lantos Swett, The Keeper features in depth conversations about the most pressing matters of human rights and justice around the world and welcomes some of the most important human rights figures of our time as guests.The Keeper takes its name from the personal conviction of the Lantos Foundation's namesake Congressman Tom Lantos, fully lived out in his own life, that we have a moral and ethical obligation to be our brother and sister’s keeper. This guiding principle led Congressman Lantos to found the Congressional Human Rights Caucus and use his eloquence, leadership, and personal passion to advocate fiercely on behalf of those whose human rights were being trampled in every corner of the world.

The Keeper: A Human Rights Podcast The Lantos Foundation

    • Society & Culture
    • 5.0 • 14 Ratings

Hosted by Lantos Foundation President, Dr. Katrina Lantos Swett, The Keeper features in depth conversations about the most pressing matters of human rights and justice around the world and welcomes some of the most important human rights figures of our time as guests.The Keeper takes its name from the personal conviction of the Lantos Foundation's namesake Congressman Tom Lantos, fully lived out in his own life, that we have a moral and ethical obligation to be our brother and sister’s keeper. This guiding principle led Congressman Lantos to found the Congressional Human Rights Caucus and use his eloquence, leadership, and personal passion to advocate fiercely on behalf of those whose human rights were being trampled in every corner of the world.

    Episode 24: Special re-release of “Vladimir Kara-Murza: The Democracy Activist Putin Wants Dead”

    Episode 24: Special re-release of “Vladimir Kara-Murza: The Democracy Activist Putin Wants Dead”

    On April 11, 2024, we are re-releasing our 2021 episode “The Democracy Activist Putin Wants Dead.” There is a very somber reason for this re-release. This date marks the two-year anniversary of Vladimir Kara-Murza’s arrest and imprisonment on charges of “public dissemination of deliberately false information.” Vladimir, one of the boldest and most eloquent Russian opposition figures, committed the great “crime” of speaking out against Russian president Vladimir Putin’s war of aggression on Ukraine. For speaking the truth, he is now serving a 25-year sentence in a remote and notoriously harsh penal colony. Vladimir’s health, already compromised by two nearly fatal poisonings ordered by the Kremlin, is declining. Time is running out. It is imperative for people everywhere to keep advocating for Vladimir’s release, to keep demanding that western governments intervene, to keep reminding the Putin regime that there is a cost to making dissidents into political prisoners. If we hope to hear Vladimir’s voice again one day, speaking out boldly for democracy and human rights in Russia, then we must speak boldly now in calling for his release.
    This re-release features a condensed version of the episode created from two conversations that Lantos Foundation President Dr. Katrina Lantos Swett had with Vladimir in late 2020 and early 2021.


    Read Vladimir Kara-Murza’s opinion pieces in The Washington Post
    Vladimir Kara-Murza’s last statement to Moscow City Court
    Write Vladimir a letter
    The Price of Conviction podcast (produced by the Raoul Wallenberg Centre for Human Rights)
    Russian dissident Kara-Murza moved to isolation cell in new Siberian prison (Reuters, Jan. 30, 2024)

    • 29 min
    Episode 23: Sports & Rights Season: Joint episode with World Affairs Council of New Hampshire

    Episode 23: Sports & Rights Season: Joint episode with World Affairs Council of New Hampshire

    The Keeper’s new Sports & Rights season kicks off with something a little different – a joint episode hosted by Dr. Katrina Lantos Swett and Tim Horgan, Executive Director of the World Affairs Council of New Hampshire and host of the Global in the Granite State podcast. Katrina and Tim join forces for a dynamic conversation about the complex and often problematic ways in which the world of sports intersects and interacts with human rights issues. They cover everything from sportswashing (ancient and modern!) – including the two biggest sporting events of 2022, the Beijing Winter Olympics and the World Cup in Qatar – to the responsibility of sports federations to promote and uphold human rights, to the powerful role that athletes can play as advocates for human rights and other social issues. The episode introduces many of the topics that the Sports & Rights season will dive into more fully, with a special focus on how they play out close to home in the Granite State.
    Global in the Granite State Podcast
    “Could 2022 be sportswashing’s biggest year yet?”, The Guardian, January 5, 2022, by Karim Zidan 
    Universal Declaration of Human Rights
    Congressman Tom Lantos on China’s 2008 Olympic bid, C-Span, July 11, 2001
    Sport & Rights Alliance
    UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights
    Center for Sport Leadership, Virginia Commonwealth University
     
    Producers: Chelsea Hedquist, Brittany Smith
    Audio technician: Chelsea Hedquist
    Audio editors: Brittany Smith, Trent Gunst
    Music: Riorr by Audiorezout 

    • 40 min
    Episode 22: Pavel Khodorkovsky

    Episode 22: Pavel Khodorkovsky

    Over the past several weeks, we have watched Russia’s unprovoked attacks on the people of Ukraine with horror, outrage, and a deep sense of fear for what this will mean for freedom and democracy in Europe – and the world. We have sought out trusted experts on the situation to help us better understand what the future may hold, for both Ukraine and Russia. In this special episode of The Keeper, we share a conversation between Lantos Foundation President Katrina Lantos Swett and Pavel Khodorkovsky. Pavel is the son of Mikhail Khodorkovsky, formerly Putin’s most prominent political prisoner and now one of his most vocal critics. Pavel is the U.S. Executive Director of Project Sunrise, an initiative to deliver humanitarian aid directly to Ukraine. In this interview, he shares his unique and hard-earned insights into the conflict in Ukraine and what is happening inside Russia.
    Project Sunrise
    Russian Anti-War Committee
    Washington Post Live: The Future of Russia – The Oligarchs with Pavel Khodorkovsky
    CNN: He was Russia’s Richest Man. Hear what he has to say about Putin.
    The Guardian: History demands the west deploy every legal and financial weapon against Putin
    The Economist: Mikhail Khodorkovsky on how to deal with the “bandit” in the Kremlin
    Vanity Fair: “The Oligarchs Are Financial Outposts in His War”: Why the West Must Ramp Up Its Campaign Against Putin’s Billionaires
    The Atlantic Council: Peace in Europe ‘will not exist’ as long as Putin is in power, says Mikhail Khodorkovsky

    • 30 min
    Episode 21: Rule of Law Season Finale – 2020 Lantos Prize Laureate Bryan Stevenson on Justice

    Episode 21: Rule of Law Season Finale – 2020 Lantos Prize Laureate Bryan Stevenson on Justice

    On the final episode of our 7-part Rule of Law season, we return to the subject of the state of the rule of law right here in America. We hear from our 2020 Lantos Human Rights Prize Laureate Bryan Stevenson, who has been a tireless advocate for applying the rule of law equally and fairly in the United States, regardless of race or economic status, as well as for dealing more honestly and openly with this country’s history of inequality. Stevenson, the founder of the Equal Justice Initiative and author of the best-selling book Just Mercy, has spent more than three decades advocating on behalf of incarcerated people who have been wrongly convicted or unfairly sentenced. In this episode, we hear his perspective on the difference between law and justice, how America compromises its standing as a human rights leader when it fails to confront its own human rights challenges, why mercy is as fundamental a principle as justice, and more. Listen to this powerful and inspiring conclusion to the Rule of Law season.
    Equal Justice Initiative
    Just Mercy (best-selling book adapted into a film)
    2020 Lantos Human Rights Prize Recipient
    Bryan Stevenson: From the courtroom to Hollywood (BookTube)
    The Moment to Close America’s Hypocrisy Gap, by Katrina Lantos Swett (Medium)

    This season of The Keeper is made possible with the generous support of Ambassador April H.  Foley, the United States Ambassador to Hungary from 2006-2009. 
    This episode of The Keeper is proudly brought to you by Shaheen & Gordon – providing full-service legal advocacy across New Hampshire & Maine since 1981. Shaheen & Gordon is dedicated to protecting people’s rights and upholding the Rule of Law.
    This final episode of our Rule of Law season is also supported by John & Patricia Broderick. 

    • 23 min
    Episode 20: Rule of Law Season – Seeking Justice on an International Stage

    Episode 20: Rule of Law Season – Seeking Justice on an International Stage

    On this season of The Keeper, we’ve heard harrowing first-hand accounts of what happens in a country when its government or leaders choose to disregard the rule of law; freedom, justice and human rights all tend to be casualties. Oftentimes, the oppressors and abusers face few consequences for their actions…but not always. When it comes to the worst of the worst crimes, there is an international instrument for accountability – the International Criminal Court, or the ICC. It is the first and only permanent international court with the legal jurisdiction to prosecute genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes and the crime of aggression. In this episode, we speak with Judge Chile Eboe-Osuji, who recently finished his term as ICC President after serving on the Court for nearly a decade. We cover the origins of the ICC, its complicated and often fraught relationship with the U.S., criticisms of the Court and points of deep controversy over which countries it chooses to investigate – or not investigate – but also Judge Eboe-Osuji’s fundamental belief in the Court’s power to “loosen the grip of tyranny in our time”. 
     
    International Criminal Court
    Farewell Message of ICC President Chile Eboe-Osuji
    Third Annual Lantos Rule of Law Lecture with Judge President Eboe-Osuji
    I.C.C. Won’t Investigate China’s Detention of Muslims (New York Times) 
    The United States Opposes the ICC Investigation into the Palestinian Situation
     
    This season of The Keeper was made possible with the generous support of Ambassador April H. Foley, who served as the United States Ambassador to Hungary from 2006 -2009.
     
    This episode is supported by former Congressman Herb Klein of New Jersey and by Jim Gottstein, author of The Zyprexa Papers. 

    • 32 min
    Episode 19: Rule of Law Season – The Real Story of Kagame’s Rwanda

    Episode 19: Rule of Law Season – The Real Story of Kagame’s Rwanda

    For the fifth episode of our Rule of Law Season, we speak with journalist and author Anjan Sundaram to help us understand what is happening with the rule of law in Rwanda. The country is often held up as a democratic success story in Africa, as it has achieved stability and prosperity over the last 25 years since the horrific genocide of 1994. But Anjan explains that the real story is very different, and he speaks from very personal experience. He moved to Kigali, Rwanda in 2009 and began teaching journalism to Rwandan reporters – and then, one by one, his students began to run into a series of misfortunes that couldn’t have been mere coincidence. Anjan came to realize that he was witnessing the fall of free speech and the rise of President Paul Kagame’s dictatorship in Rwanda. Anjan speaks about the impact of Kagame’s authoritarian regime on the everyday lives of Rwandans, the brazen ways in which he stifles any dissent, and how western countries have actually emboldened Kagame to consolidate his power. He also discusses the Rwandan government’s kidnapping of human rights hero Paul Rusesabagina and the show trial he faces in Kigali, and he explains what it will mean for any critics of President Kagame going forward.   
     
    Anjan Sundaram Official Website
    “Rwanda’s Rendition of a Hollywood Hero Confirms the Country’s Descent into Dictatorship”, by Anjan Sundaram in Foreign Policy
    “I Think I May Die Tonight”, excerpt from Bad News by Anjan Sundaram in Foreign Policy
    Bad News: Last Journalists in a Dictatorship by Anjan Sundaram
    YouTube: Rwanda paid for the flight that led to Paul Rusesabagina arrest – UpFront
    The Daily: A Battle for the Soul of Rwanda 
    A Tribute to Paul Rusesabagina by Congressman Tom Lantos (July 25, 2005) 
    Hotel Rwanda Rusesabagina Foundation - #FreeRusesabagina


    This season of The Keeper was made possible with the generous support of  Ambassador April H. Foley, who served as the United States Ambassador to Hungary from 2006 -2009. 

    This episode is also supported by four distinguished professors from the University of New Hampshire Franklin Pierce School of Law:
    Professor John Greabe, Director of the Warren B. Rudman Center for Justice, Leadership & Public Service.
    Professor Albert “Buzz” Scherr, Chair of the International Criminal Law and Justice Program and former Director of the State Department Rule of Law Project in Northern Russia.
    Professor Robert E. McDaniel, a former U.S. Federal Prosecutor in Washington, DC, former Head of Legal Affairs for the OSCE in the Republic of Kosovo and now a faculty member in the International Criminal Law and Justice Program.
    Judge Arthur Gajarsa, who joined the faculty as Distinguished Jurist-in-Residence after retiring from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.

    • 35 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
14 Ratings

14 Ratings

DSMITH592 ,

Can’t wait to hear more!

Have enjoyed every episode so far! Please keep it up!

KACLSM ,

Important lessons

A good reminder that the price for human dignity is often very high, and that those who fight for the rights of others at home or abroad face threats on all sides.

This podcast certainly makes me feel grateful to learn about these incredible individuals, and I am eager to learn more. Keep them coming!

Magyar guy ,

A great podcast

This is a remarkable and important podcast that is so needed in today’s world. The topics covered are at times heart-rending, but Dr. Swett does a great job of finding the inspiration that comes from good men and women standing up to injustice and oppression. I’m looking forward to the next episode!

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