H=Change Link/Img Case For the Children of the World Fellowshipheader

May/June 1999

Appeal of the Nobel Peace Prize Laureates:

For the Children of the World


To: Heads of State of all member countries of the General Assembly of the United Nations
From: Nobel Peace Prize Laureates

Today, in every single country throughout the world, there are many children silently suffering the effects and consequences of violence.

This violence takes many different forms: between children on streets, at school, in family life, and in the community. There is physical violence, psychological violence, socio-economic violence, environmental violence, and political violence. Many children - too many children - live a "culture of violence."

We wish to contribute to reduce their suffering. We believe that each child can discover, by himself, that violence is not inevitable. We can offer hope, not only to the children of the world, but to all of humanity, by beginning to create, and build, a new Culture of Nonviolence.

For this reason, we address this solemn appeal to all Heads of State of all member countries of the General Assembly of the United Nations, for the UN General Assembly to declare:

That the first decade of the new millennium, the years 2000-2010, be declared the "Decade for a Culture of Nonviolence;"

That at the start of the decade the year 2000 be declared the "Year of Education for Nonviolence;"

That nonviolence be taught at every level in our societies during this decade, to make the children of the world aware of the real, practical meaning and benefits of nonviolence in their daily lives, in order to reduce the violence, and consequent suffering, perpetrated against them and humanity in general.

Together, we can build a new culture of nonviolence for humankind which will give hope to all humanity, and in particular, to the children of our world.

With deepest respect,

The Nobel Peace Prize Laureates

1965: UNICEF; 1970: Norman Borlaug; 1977: Betty Williams; 1977: Mairead Corrigan-Maguire; 1979: Mother Teresa; 1980: Adolfo Pérez Esquivel; 1983: Lech Walesa; 1984: Desmond Mpilo Tutu; 1986: Elie Wiesel; 1987: Oscar Arias Sanchez; 1989: Dalaï Lama (Tenzin Gyatso); 1990: Mikhail Sergeyevich Gorbachev; 1991: Aung San Suu Kyi; 1993: Frederik Willem de Klerk; 1993: Nelson Mandela; 1994: Yasser Arafat; 1994: Shimon Péres; 1995: Joseph Rotblat; 1996: José Ramos-Horta; 1996: Carlos Felipe Ximenes Belo