 Hyperledger is an open source community hosted by the Linux Foundation, focused on developing a suite of stable frameworks, tools, and libraries for enterprise-grade blockchain deployments. Hyperledger's projects have become a global resource because of its open source foundation, yet there is one major roadblock that prevents the community from being truly as open and global as intended. English is the official language of Hyperledger, but 80% of the world does not natively speak that language, so can something truly be considered open if millions of potential people across the world are blocked by a language barrier? I started learning Fabric blockchain technology in 2018. At that time, besides official documents, I did not have much information about it. But the official documents of Fabric are much faster, so it is very difficult for me to follow up with the official documents. I believe that many developers have similar experiences with me, so in order to let more developers read official documents, I decided to make some contributions for the official documents. Upon realizing the value of that translation, in 2019, the Fabric team spearheaded an initiative to translate technical documents to as many languages as possible, and the enthusiasm that began in China quickly ballooned with more languages following suit. For a technology to obtain broad acceptance, it needs to be widely accessible. With the availability of the Hyperledger documentation in Portuguese, we offer the opportunity for the entire market to have access to its content, allowing people like students of technical courses, university students, or executives interested in learning about what blockchain is, to find the answers to their questions. If you live in Japan, it is difficult to find information about the Fabric without the Japanese language. If you translate it, you can easily understand the concept and background of the technology, and you can spread the motto to use the Fabric. But the value of adding those translations doesn't only benefit the people who speak one of those languages. Every new person that shares their unique skills and experience makes Hyperledger software better for everyone that uses it in any part of the world. The translation teams have helped us tremendously, not just by finding errors with our documentation or things we could have explained better, but the latest RFC and Fabric came from a team in a non-English-speaking country, presumably who was reading documentation in their own language. Brian Bellendorf, the Executive Director of Hyperledger, described the software as an open-sourced community of communities. Are there potential developers in your community right now that are only held back because documentation is not available in their native language? We need you to be the thread that brings us together. So if you have the ability to translate English to your language, visit our translation page where we've laid out simple instructions and resources to get you started. And once you begin, you can contact us at any time so we can help. Fabric documentation was our first focus, but we need translation on every element that makes up the Hyperledger community, and several contributors have already begun that process. Hyperledger's homepage is now available in several languages. Meetups are hosted in many languages. There is a free online training course in Spanish, and subtitles in different languages have been added to some videos. But it's not limited to those areas. If it's important to you, then let's get it translated. Many of us come from Fabric's open-sourced community. We focus on Fabric's technical and cultural contribution. There are a lot of people who are interested in blockchain technology. For those who want to know about the whole of Fabric and Hyperledger, there has also been a trend in events recently. For more information, visit www.hyperledger.org forward slash translate.