Forthspeaking of Mankind Rights

''Signed December 10, 1946, by the United Nations General Assembly, the document from which the following has been translated is one of the most widely disseminated documents in history, and the most widely translated ever - in whole and in part. Original text of this Universal Declaration of Human Rights can be found at http://www.un.org/en/documents/udhr/.'''

Forespeech (Preamble)
Whereas andetness of the inborn worthship and of the even and unafremthendly rights of all leed of the mennishly ermenkin is the statheling of freedom, soothfastness and frith in the world,

Whereas withhowing/overgetting and forseenness for mennishly rights have led to evil deeds which have astounded the inwit of mankind, and the onset of a world in which mennishly beings shall brook freedom of speech and belief and freedom from fear and want has been onbidden as the highest hope of the churlfolk,

Whereas it is needmickle, if man is not to be driven to have toflight, in the worst fall, to upstand against misweald and downtreading, that mennishly rights should be frithed by lawsteer,

Whereas it is needmickle to further the growth of friendly beteeings between theeds,

Whereas the folks of the Gathertang Theeds have in the Groundlaw bolstered their trow in underlying mennishly rights, in the worth and worthiness of the mennishly wight and in the even rights of men and women and have fastlaid to further theedly forthgang and better metestaves of life in greater freedom,

Whereas Lithriches have forspoken themselves to bereach, in andwist with the Gathertang Theeds, the furthering of ermenworldly eighting for and beeighting of mennishly rights and underlying freedoms,

Whereas an ymean understanding of these rights and freedoms is of the greatest meaningfulness for the full forworklying of this forspeech,

Now, Therefore THE ERMENSAMENING quethes THIS ERMENFORTHSPELL OF MENNISHLY RIGHTS as a mean metestaff of throughteeing for all folks and all theeds, to the end that every wight and every lifetool of ymeanship, keeping this Forthspell ever in mind, shall strive by teaching and underwisening to further eighting for these rights and freedoms and by forthgangly metes, theedly and altheedly, to fasten their ermen and worksome onknowledge and fulfilling, both amongst the folks of Lithriches themselves and amongst the folks of lands under their onweald.

Setness (Article) 1
All mennishly beings are born free and alike in worthiness and rights. They are gifted with forstand and inwit and should behave towards one another in a ghost of brotherhood.

Setness 2
Everyone is berighted to all the rights and freedoms set forth in this Forthspell, without beshed of any kind, such as stock, hue, kin, tongue, belief, beleadly or other ween, theedly or emeanshiply wortroom, fee, birth or other standing. Furthermore, no beshed shall be made on the grounds of the beleadly, onwealdly or altheedly tostand of the land or rike to which a wight belongs, whether it be selfstanding, trust, unselfstanding or under any other hindering of kinrike.

Setness 3
Everyone has the right to life, freedom and hoadly fastening.

Setness 4
No one shall be held in haftdom or thowhood; haftdom and the thow trade shall be forbidden in all their hoads.

Setness 5
No one shall be hiresomed to orlieshaft or to rethe, unmenchly or unatheling eviling or harmshare.

Setness 6
Everyone has the right to acknowledging everywhere as a wight before the law.

Setness 7
All are alike before the law and are berighted without any sunderness to even shielding under the law. All are berighted to even shielding against any hindering in breach of this Forthspell and against any onspurring to such hindering.

Setness 8
Everyone has the right to a working lawhelp by the set folkthing for deeds in breach of the groundrights bestowed upon him by the groundlaw or by law.

Setness 9
No one shall be under threat of willkurly holdlaying, fastholding, or banning.

Setness 10
Everyone is berighted in full evenhood to a fair and open hearing by a selfstanding and unlinked deemingbench, in the fastmaking of his rights and beholdennesses and of any wite against him.

Setness 11
(1) Everyone charged with a penal offence has the right to be presumed shildless until showed guilty as by law in a ledely trial at which he has had all the hettings needed for his wering.

(2) No one shall be held guilty of any penal hean on behalf of any deed or omission which did not make a penal hean, under thedish or althedish law, at the time when it was done. Nor shall a heavier strife be given than the one that was givingly at the time the penal hean was done.

Setness 17
(1) Everyone has the right to ownhood alone as well as in fay with others.

(2) No one shall be fallenly besheared of their ownhood.

Setness 18
Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, inwit and worship; this right incloses freedom to switch his worship or belief, and freedom, either alone or banded with others and in open sight or at home, to show his worship or belief in teaching, doing, prayer and underlooking.

Setness 19
Everyone has the right to freedom of wen and swettling; this right inholds freedom to hold wens without inbreaking and to seek, beget and shed knowledge and howes through any media and heedless of meres.

Setness 20
(1) Everyone has the right to freedom of frithful fay and gathering.

(2) No one may be nithed to belong to a thede.

Setness 21
(1) Everyone has the right to dealnim in the reding of his ethel, straightly or through freely chosen bystanders.

(2) Everyone has the right of even neasing to mean theens in his land.

(3) The will of the lede shall be the staddle of the rike of reding; this will shall be swettled in tidely and hale corings which shall be by almeanly and even rights and shall be held by dern core or by sameworth free coring metes.

Setness 22
Everyone, as a limb of fellowship, has the right to thedely munding and is inlisted to forthbringing, through thedely swench and althedish by-working and in thaving with the stighting and orshafts of each Ethel, of the thrftly, thedely and kinly rights for his ar and the free unfolding of his selfhood.

Setness 23
(1) Everyone has the right to work, to free choice of work, to fair and belikening onlay of work and to warding against worklessness.

(2) Everyone, without any shedding, has the right to even toll for even work.

(3) Everyone who works has the right to fair and belikening yielding sickering for himself and his inherd a forbeing worthy of werely ar, and added, if needed, with other means of thedely warding.

(4) Everyone has the right to frume and to fay trade thedes for the warding of his heedings.

Setness 24
Everyone has the right to rest and cweme, inholding shedly mering of working logs and tidely holidays with tol.

Setness 25
(1) Everyone has the right to a meanset of living fitted for the health and well-being of himself and of his inherd, inholding food, clothing, housing and healing care and needly thedely thews, and the right to munding in the hap of worklessness, sickness, lameness, widowhood, old tide or other lack of livelihood in umstallings beyond his wield.

(2) Motherhood and childhood are inlisted to swotel care and fultum. All children, whether born in or out of wedlock, shall cweme the same thedely warding.