Natural Law and International Law: Carlos P. Romulo
Natural Law and International Law: Carlos P. Romulo
Natural Law and International Law: Carlos P. Romulo
Carlos P. Romulo
(President, General Assembly of the United Nations; formerly
Secretary of Information and Public Relations, and Secretary
of Public Instruction in the Cabinet of the Philippines; Resi-
dent Commissioner of the Philippines to the United States,
1944; Aide-de-Camp to General of the Armies Douglas Mac-
Arthur, 1944; author of I Saw the Fall of the Philippines;
Mother America; My Brother Americans; See the Philip-
pines Rise.)
NATURAL LAW AND INTERNATIONAL LAW
I AM
you adeeply grateful
problem for at
that lies thisthe
opportunity
very heart toofstudy with
our quest
for peace.
I shall not presume to discourse on this subject as an
authority on law. I speak merely as a witness to some
aspects of its relation to the work in which all nations
and all men of good will are now engaged - the work
of establishing a just order in the world under which
mankind can live in peace, freedom and security.
Together with many able and unselfish men from all
over the world, I have been associated with this task con-
tinuously since the United Nations was organized in San
Francisco in 1945. From the experience and the lessons
of the past four years, I have drawn some conclusions
which I hope will cast a little more light on the problem
before us.
To my mind, the most important lesson which the
work of the United Nations has taught us is the realiza-
tion that we cannot have lasting peace in the world until
we have established a system of just law which shall be
universally accepted and applied. By just law I mean
law based on reason, consonant with the essential re-
quirements of man's nature and deriving ultimate sanc-
tion from the source of all authority, God Himself. I
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