
The six-word challenge
Can you express dignity in just 6 words?
Check these out!
All people equitably belonging in space
To stand in someone else’s shoes.
Advocacy and rights upheld for everyone
You feel truly respected and valued
Pride in whatever you do, are
Respect is forever, yourself and others
Everyone deserves respect, compassion and fairness
Treating everyone like they have value
Right to be treated with respect.
Everyone is valued and respected universally
seen, heard, wanted, respected, loved, appreciated
Recognizing that everyone matters and belongs
Inherent worth demands universal respect, always
Measuring worth to protect citizens equally
Universal rights all humans inherently deserve
Respect for yourself and anyone around
Feeling valued just for being human
One everyone knows but never saw
For you, for me, for all
Wars end: dignity claimed, treaties signed
Universal dignity is in our vicinity
Quiet strength for man to exist
Humanity? Lost in one’s own interest
Foundation for all, forgotten by none
Ripped clothing (dignity) on the street
Parents called. DNA needed for identification
Father remains incarcerated. Society remains unaware
The intangible value of all persons’ life
Inherent respect worth for all indiscriminately
All people worldwide deserve true equality
Fundamental, universal, indivisible and inherent principle
Honesty, “have dignity," to own up
Protecting humans’ equality, free from inhumanity
What you stand for yourself, respect
Having respect and respecting someone’s character
Inherent human rights everyone deserves
Everyone is an end in itself
The value of every human life
Dignity means community; humans still separate (as a verb)
Dignity means community; humans still separate (as an adjective)
Being fair, or not hurting others
Everyone has the same rights and freedoms
Dignity is inherent respect and equality
Our universal language, not spoken fluently
Worth, value, respect of all individuals.
Dignity is similar to self-respect
Self-confidence and how you are seen
Dignity means ability to do something
Having privacy, personal space, and respect
Dignity is the choices you make
One’s self-esteem, their morals of life
Your own values, morals, or discipline
It’s the things inside of you
Universal human rights and personal autonomy
These were written by students in 7th grade and 8th grade, at university, and in law school.