El Salvador

The Carter Center worked in El Salvador and throughout the Americas to help resolve or prevent conflicts, bolster democracy and good governance, and advocate for human rights. Our work culminated in 1998 with an historic moratorium on arm sales in the region.

As a member of the Friends of the Inter-American Democratic Charter, the Center encourages citizens and government leaders to overcome the country’s troubling political past and forge a more constructive path forward. 

Impact

  • Honored the work of six Jesuit priests who died for their activism with the Carter-Menil Human Rights Prize In 1991
  • El Salvador President Armando Calderón Sol included among the signatories of a 1998 Carter Center-sponsored moratorium on arms sales
Legacy

Human Rights

How It Started 

The Carter-Menil Human Rights Foundation was created in 1986 by former U.S. President Jimmy Carter and French-American philanthropist Dominique de Menil to promote the protection of human rights worldwide. A $100,000 prize was awarded periodically to individuals or organizations for their outstanding efforts on behalf of human rights. 

Our Work and Methods 

  • In 1991, the Carter-Menil Human Rights Prize was awarded posthumously to six Jesuit priests executed on Nov. 16, 1989, by members of the Salvadoran military for their activism. 
  • At the prize ceremony, President Carter said, “If we add the courage of … the Jesuit martyrs to our present strength and influence, then a world of peace and human rights, God willing, will someday be ours.” 

Impacts 

  • The award enabled other human rights activists to continue the work of the slain priests and focus global attention on their struggle for justice. 

This project ended in 1994. 

Legacy

Peacebuilding

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