Eleanor Roosevelt, UN Chair of Drafting Committee, 1948
Universal
Declaration of Human Rights [UN, 1948]
Plain
Language Version
[Note: In 1948, the United Nations drafted and
unanimously passed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, chaired by Eleanor
Roosevelt. The original version can be found at: http://www.un.org/en/documents/udhr/index.shtml
... This “Plain Language Version” was written to make it easier for children
and others to read and understand.]
1 When children are born, they are free and
each should be treated in the same way. They have reason and conscience and
should act towards one another in a friendly manner.
2 Everyone can
claim the following rights, despite
- a different sex
- a different skin
color
- speaking a
different language
- thinking
different things
- believing in
another religion
- owning more or
less
- being born in
another social group
- coming from
another country
It also makes no
difference whether the country you live in is independent or not.
3 You have the
right to live, and to live in freedom and safety.
4 Nobody has the
right to treat you as his or her slave and you should not make anyone your
slave.
5 Nobody has the
right to torture you.
6 You should be
legally protected in the same way everywhere, and like everyone else.
7 The law is the
same for everyone; it should be applied in the same way to all.
8 You should be
able to ask for legal help when the rights your country grants you are not
respected.
9 Nobody has the
right to put you in prison, to keep you there, or to send you away from your
country unjustly, or without good reason.
10 If you go on
trial this should be done in public. The people who try you should not let
themselves be influenced by others.
11 You should be
considered innocent until it can be proved that you are guilty. If you are
accused of a crime, you should always have the right to defend yourself. Nobody
has the right to condemn you and punish you for something you have not done.
12 You have the
right to ask to be protected if someone tries to harm your good name, enter
your house, open your letters, or bother you or your family without a good
reason.
13 You have the
right to come and go as you wish within your country. You have the right to
leave your country to go to another one; and you should be able to return to
your country if you want.
14 If someone
hurts you, you have the right to go to another country and ask it to protect
you. You lose this right if you have killed someone and if you, yourself, do
not respect what is written here.
15 You have the
right to belong to a country and nobody can prevent you, without a good reason,
from belonging to a country if you wish.
16 As soon as a
person is legally entitled, he or she has the right to marry and have a family.
In doing this, neither the colour of your skin, the country you come from nor
your religion should be impediments. Men and women have the same rights when
they are married and also when they are separated.
Nobody should
force a person to marry.The government of your country should protect you and the members of your family.
17 You have the
right to own things and nobody has the right to take these from you without a
good reason.
18 You have the
right to profess your religion freely, to change it, and to practise it either
on your own or with other people.
19 You have the
right to think what you want, to say what you like, and nobody should forbid
you from doing so. You should be able to share your ideas also—with people from
any other country.
20 You have the
right to organize peaceful meetings or to take part in meetings in a peaceful
way. It is wrong to force someone to belong to a group.
21 You have the
right to take part in your country's political affairs either by belonging to
the government yourself or by choosing politicians who have the same ideas as
you. Governments should be voted for regularly and voting should be secret. You
should get a vote and all votes should be equal. You also have the same right
to join the public service as anyone else.
22 The society in
which you live should help you to develop and to make the most of all the
advantages (culture, work, social welfare) which are offered to you and to all
the men and women in your country.
23 You have the
right to work, to be free to choose your work, to get a salary which allows you
to support your family. If a man and a woman do the same work, they should get
the same pay. All people who work have the right to join together to defend
their interests.
24 Each work day
should not be too long, since everyone has the right to rest and should be able
to take regular paid holidays.
25 You have the
right to have whatever you need so that you and your family: do not fall ill or
go hungry; have clothes and a house; and are helped if you are out of work, if
you are ill, if you are old, if your wife or husband is dead, or if you do not earn
a living for any other reason you cannot help. Mothers and their children are
entitled to special care. All children have the same rights to be protected,
whether or not their mother was married when they were born.
26 You have the
right to go to school and everyone should go to school. Primary schooling
should be free. You should be able to learn a profession or continue your
studies as far as wish. At school, you should be able to develop all your
talents and you should be taught to get on with others, whatever their race,
religion or the country they come from. Your parents have the right to choose
how and what you will be taught at school.
27 You have the
right to share in your community's arts and sciences, and any good they do.
Your works as an artist, writer, or a scientist should be protected, and you
should be able to benefit from them.
28 So that your
rights will be respected, there must be an 'order' which can protect them. This
‘order’ should be local and worldwide.
29 You have
duties towards the community within which your personality can only fully
develop. The law should guarantee human rights. It should allow everyone to
respect others and to be respected.
30 In all parts
of the world, no society, no human being, should take it upon her or himself to
act in such a way as to destroy the rights which you have just been reading
about.
This plain
language version is only given as a guide. For an exact rendering of each
principle, refer students to the original. This version is based in part on the
translation of a text, prepared in 1978, for the World Association for the
School as an Instrument of Peace, by a Research Groyp of the University of
Geneva, under the responsibility of Prof. L. Massarenti. In preparing the
translation, the Group used a basic vocabulary of 2,500 words in use in the
French-speaking part of Switzerland. Teachers may adopt this methodology by
translating the text of the Universal Declaration in the language in use in
their region.
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