Every year on 20 November, the world pauses to celebrate World Children’s Day—a day that reminds us that childhood is not merely a phase of life, but a sacred trust. The theme for World Children’s Day 2025, “My Day, My Rights,” challenges us to view life through the eyes of children and to ask a simple yet powerful question: Are their rights alive in every hour of every day?
Two Mornings, One World:
Imagine a child waking in a peaceful home—safe, nourished, loved. They prepare for school, laugh with friends, learn, dream, and return to a family that listens when they speak.
Now imagine another child awakening in fear—in an unsafe home or on a cold street, deprived of nutritious food, forced into labour instead of school, silenced when they try to express themselves.
These two mornings exist in the same world, separated not by geography alone but by inequality, neglect, and injustice. “My Day, My Rights” is a reminder that every child deserves a day filled with hope, safety, dignity and opportunity.

A child’s day is a tapestry woven from countless moments, each connected to one of the four fundamental rights of children:
Children have four fundamental rights that ensure their well-being and growth. The right to survival guarantees access to essentials such as nutritious food, clean water, proper healthcare, and safe shelter so they can live healthy lives.
The right to development supports their physical, emotional, cognitive, social, linguistic, and spiritual growth, enabling them to reach their full potential. The right to protection ensures they are safe from abuse, exploitation, trafficking, and neglect, creating an environment where childhood can flourish.
Finally, the right to participation empowers children to express their views and be heard in matters affecting their lives, whether within their families, schools, or communities.
When these rights are upheld, a child’s day becomes a celebration of life. When they are denied, their day becomes a silent struggle.
At the heart of the 2025 theme lies a simple but profound call to action: Listen to the stories of children.
Sometimes, what a child needs most is an adult who truly hears them. Parents, teachers, leaders and communities must step into a child’s world—to understand their joys, fears, hopes and challenges.
A single day in a child’s life can leave a mark that endures forever. A day filled with love and opportunity nurtures confidence and curiosity. A day filled with fear or neglect can lead to trauma that lasts into adulthood, affecting physical, emotional and cognitive development.
Child abuse and deprivation don’t simply harm a child in the moment—they shape futures, limit potential, and dim possibilities.
Every child is born with a pure natural state—innocence, wonder, empathy, imagination, and an intrinsic capacity for love and awareness. These spiritual capacities can only flourish when caregivers nurture them and when societies uphold children’s rights. Each day is an opportunity for spiritual growth, connection, and the unfolding of a child’s true human potential.
In UNICEF’s flagship report, The State of the World’s Children, more than 417 million children in low- and middle-income countries are revealed to be severely deprived in at least two essential areas—nutrition, water, sanitation, education, healthcare or housing. This means that one in five children is living a day shaped by deprivation rather than dignity.
This is a call the world cannot afford to ignore.
A Promise for Every Day
“My Day, My Rights” is more than a theme—it is a promise:
A promise that no child will wake up to fear, hunger, or loneliness.
A promise that every child’s day will be filled with safety, learning, joy, and love.
A promise that children’s rights will not exist only in speeches or documents, but in daily life, in every home, school, clinic and community.
A society that listens to children, protects them from harm, offers equal opportunities and nurtures their rights is a society investing in a peaceful and compassionate future. When we honour the rights of every child, we are not just shaping childhood—we are shaping the world.
As we mark World Children’s Day 2025, let us renew our promise: for every child, every right, every day.



















