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The Universal Declaration of Human Rights sets the Guinness World Record for Most Translated Document

Over 300 languages!

 

Forward by Jimmy Carter 

"During the first year of my Presidency I had the honor of signing, on behalf of the United States of America, the two international covenants on human rights which, together with the Universal Declaration, make up the International Bill of Human Rights.

Both the United States and the United Nations had their origins in a vision of greatness of the human possibility.  The American Declaration of Independence speaks of the idea that, "...all men are created equal...endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights...Life Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness..."The Charter of the United Nations speaks of "...faith in fundamental human rights, in the dignity and worth of the human person, in the equal rights of men and women and nations large and small..."Though separated by a century and a half in time, these visions are identical in spirit. The covenants that I signed in 1977 are unusual in the world of international politics and diplomacy.  They say absolutely nothing about power-full governments or military alliances or the privileges and immunities of statesmen and high official.  Instead they are concerned about the rights of individual human beings and the duties of governments to the people they are created to serve.

The international Covenant on Civil and Political Rights concerns what governments must not do to their people, and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights concerns what governments must do for their people.

By ratifying the covenant on civil and political rights, a government pledges, as a matter of law, to refrain from subjecting its own people to arbitrary imprisonment or to cruel or degrading treatment.  It recognizes the right of every person to freedom of thought, freedom of conscience, freedom of religion, freedom of opinion, freedom of expression, freedom of association, the right of peaceful assembly and the right to emigrate from one's country.

A government entering this covenant states explicitly that there are sharp limits on its own powers over the lives of its people.  But as Thomas Jefferson once wrote about the Bill of Rights which became part of our own American Republic, "These are fetters against doing evil which no honest government should decline."

By ratifying the other covenant on economic social and cultural rights a government commits itself to its best efforts to secure for its citizens the basic standards of material existence, social justice, and cultural opportunity.  This covenant recognizes the governments are the instruments and the servants of their people.

It would be idle to pretend that these two covenants themselves reflect the world as it is. But to those who believe that instruments of this kind are futile, I would suggest that there are powerful lessons to be learned in the history of my own country.

Our Declaration of Independence and the Bill of Rights expressed a lofty standard of liberty and equality.  But in practice these rights were enjoyed only by a very small segment of our people.  In the years and decades that followed those who struggled for universal suffrage, those who struggled for the abolition of slavery, those who struggled for women's rights, those who struggled for racial equality-in spite of discouragement and personal danger-drew their inspiration from these two great documents the Declaration of Independence and the Bill of Rights, and from our own Constitution.  Because the beliefs expressed in these documents were at the heart of what we Americans most valued about ourselves, they created a momentum toward the realization of the hopes that they offered.

Some of these hopes were 200years in being realized.  But ultimately, because the basis was there in the documents signed at the origin of our country/ people's discouragements and disappointments were overcome and these dreams prevailed.

My hope and my belief is that the international covenants and the Universal Declaration that make up the International Bill of Human Rights can play a similar role in the advancement of and the ultimate realization of human rights for individual men and women throughout all nations of the world."

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