Preamble
Preamble
Whereas it is stated in the Preamble to the
Constitution of UNESCO,
adopted on 16 November 1945, that "the
great and terrible
war which has now ended was a
war made possible by the denial of the
democratic principles of the
dignity,
equality and
mutual respect of
men, and by the
propagation, in their
place, through ignorance and
prejudice, of the doctrine of the
inequality of
men and
races", and whereas, according to Article I of the said
Constitution, the
purpose of UNESCO "is to
contribute to
peace and
security by
promoting collaboration among the
nations through
education,
science and
culture in
order to further
universal respect for
justice, for the
rule of law and for the
human rights and
fundamental freedoms which are affirmed for the peoples of the
world, without
distinction of
race,
sex,
language or
religion, by the
Charter of the United Nations",
Recognizing that, more than three decades after the founding of UNESCO, these
principles are just as
significant as they were when they were embodied in its
Constitution,
Mindful of the process of decolonization and other
historical changes which have led most of the peoples formerly under
foreign rule to recover their
sovereignty, making the
international community a
universal and diversified whole and creating new
opportunities of eradicating the scourge of
racism and of putting an end to its odious manifestations in all
aspects of
social and
political life, both nationally and internationally,
Convinced that the essential unity of the
human race and consequently the
fundamental equality of all
human beings and all peoples, recognized in the loftiest
expressions of
philosophy,
morality and
religion, reflect an ideal towards which ethics and
science are converging today,
Convinced that all peoples and all
human groups, whatever their composition or
ethnic origin,
contribute according to their own genius to the
progress of the
civilizations and cultures which, in their plurality and as a result of their interpenetration,
constitute the
common heritage of
mankind,
Bearing in
mind the four
statements on the
race question adopted by
experts convened by UNESCO,
Reaffirming its desire to play a vigorous and constructive part in the
implementation of the
programme of the Decade for
Action to
Combat Racism and
Racial Discrimination, as defined by the
General Assembly of the United Nations at its twenty-eighth
session,
Noting with the gravest
concern that
racism,
racial discrimination,
colonialism and
apartheid continue to afflict the
world in ever-changing forms, as a result both of the continuation of
legislative provisions and
government and
administrative practices
contrary to the
principles of
human rights and also of the continued existence of
political and
social structures, and of relationships and attitudes, characterized by injustice and contempt for
human beings and leading to the
exclusion,
humiliation and
exploitation, or to the forced assimilation, of the
members of disadvantaged
groups,
Expressing its indignation at these
offences against
human dignity, deploring the obstacles they
place in the way of
mutual understanding between peoples and alarmed at the
danger of their seriously disturbing
international peace and
security,
Adopts and solemnly proclaims this
Declaration on
Race and
Racial Prejudice: