International Collaboration to End Violence
Robert J. Burrowes, KalimNews, Kalimpong, 21 April 2017: While much of the world is engulfed in violence of one sort or another (whether violence in the home or on the street, exploitation, ecological destruction or war), a global network of individuals and organizations is committed to ending this violence in all of its manifestations.
With individual signatories in 100
countries and organizational endorsements in 35 countries, each of these
individuals and organizations works on one or more manifestations of violence
in their locality and some of the organizations and networks have considerable
national or even international reach.
However, as you might understand, there is
a great deal to be done and the Charter network continues to expand as more
people and organizations are motivated to join this shared effort.
Here is an outline of what some of these
individual signatories of 'The People's Charter to Create a Nonviolent World'https://thepeoplesnonviolencecharter.wordpress.com/ are doing. You are welcome to join them.
A native of Iran, Professor Manijeh
Navidnia was born in Tehran where she attended school and university. She
married in 1982 and had her first child in 1985. Her original research
interests were in social science and sociology but after collaborating with the
Islamic Azad University, she became interested in strategic studies and most of
her research work and publications since then have focused on security. Her
first book in 2009 was particularly focused on 'societal security' and her
political engagements are designed to enhance international cooperation across
cultures.
Mahad Wasuge is a key figure at the
Heritage Institute for Policy Studies in Somalia. The Institute has recently
published a shocking report on 'Somalia's Drought Induced Crises: Immediate
Action and Change of Strategy Needed'www.heritageinstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/Somalia%E2%80%99s-Drought-Induced-Crises-Immediate-Action-and-Change-of-Strategy-Needed.pdf in response to the ongoing drought in
Somalia which threatens millions of people. 'The ongoing drought in Somalia –
referred to in the Somali language as Sima, which means the leveler, ubiquitous
or pervasive – has enveloped the entire country. If rain does not arrive by mid
April, and if a massive humanitarian campaign is not mounted swiftly, the
drought could morph into an insidious famine that could devastate the country':
hundreds of thousands of vulnerable men, women and children could starve to
death. Sadly, while awareness of the ongoing suffering and the potential famine
has been high, 'the response of the international community and the mitigation
strategy by Somalia has been wholly inadequate.' Despite UN agencies raising
over US$300 million, the majority of the population across the country is not
receiving basic necessities. 'Many pastoral communities have also lost 80
percent of their livestock, escalating their vulnerability to an alarming and
perilous level.'
Ruth Phillips is the central figure in the
initiative to create 'an ecological, co-housing village here on a fully
restored, 17th century chateau estate in rural France. The property lies in the
heart of 30 acres of parklands and forests in the midst of quiet, deep-green
nature, surrounded by hills and mountains, forests and lakes. It is set in the
eastern Dordogne, one of most unspoilt regions of France'. They have permission
to create a permaculture village around the chateau for residential and/or
holiday use, with 23 houses blended into the natural and historic landscape.
Plans include the chateau 'hub' offering education, leisure and cultural
activities for residents and visitors; a small restaurant; a multi-functional
workshop space; the swimming pool; a sauna and communal space, as well as large
individual garden plots and access to acres of forest and fields on the
property. The site aims to be a showcase for permaculture and sustainable
living. Too good to be true? Check out the Ecochateau http://www.eco-chateau.com/eco-house.htm website and email Ruth if you want to go
there to stay for a while and help make their vision a more complete reality.
Burmese scholar and activist, Dr Maung
Zarni has been indefatigable in his efforts to raise awareness of the Burmese
government's genocidal assault on the Rohingya Muslim population in Burma. He
has also not shied away from drawing attention to democracy icon Aung San Suu
Kyi's complicity in this genocidal assault. While he has written many articles
on the subject, this two-minute video will give you a clearer sense of Zarni,
the compassionate scholar/activist: 'Multiple Denials of Myanmar's Atrocity
Crimes against Rohingyas prevent a peaceful resolution'. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwmNpmszN9w&feature=youtu.be For more, check out Zarni's website. http://www.maungzarni.net/
In one of her public talks, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nO20TBCU51c Kathleen Macferran posed the question 'Are
we really safer when we put those who harm others behind bars and forget about
them?' She explores the idea of 'turning our prisons into houses of healing and
creating connections that lead to greater safety' by having incarcerated men
and women return to our communities as peacemakers.
Greg Kleven is a 68 year-old American
living and teaching English in Viet Nam. He was 18 years old when he went to
Viet Nam as a soldier in 1967 'and thought that what I was doing was right. But
after a few months in country I realized that I had made a huge mistake. The
war was wrong and I should never have participated.' After going home he had a
hard time adjusting back into society. 'I couldn't get the war out of my mind.'
In 1988 he went back to Viet Nam as a tourist and realized he had a chance 'to
make up for what I had done'. For the next two years he helped organize 'return
trips for veterans who wanted to go back and see Viet Nam as a country, not a
war'. In 1990 he started teaching English in Ho Chi Minh City and he has been
doing it ever since. Greg shares the passion to 'some day put an end to all
wars and violence in the world'.
Professor of Mathematical Analysis,
Tarcisio Praciano-Pereira, reports from Brazil that he is personally well but
that living in Brazil is 'very bad! I am 73 years old and I have suffered the
dictatorship of 1964 when I was forced into exile. So I have a very clear
picture of what is going on here and this doesn't make
me well because I know clearly the dangers
we are facing. My life has changed entirely, my intellectual production has
dropped down because I am all the time in the fight. I am seriously afraid! And
I am not a young boy anymore as I was in 1964.' He advised the death of a judge
of the Supreme Court, who was overseeing a massive corruption investigation
into the state oil company, Petrobras, against the will of the 'putsch owners'
and conservative media outlet 'Globo'. It is clear that the possibility of
crime in this death cannot be dismissed. Now they are trying to replace the
dead judge with the Justice Secretary 'who is nothing but a criminal. Please
take a stand against this if you can. Afraid is the right picture, friend! Yes,
Fora Temer! Fora Temer, o traira!'
Ending human violence requires courage, not
to mention toughness and determination, often in extraordinarily difficult
circumstances.
For that reason, you might be sceptical
about the prospects of achieving it.
But if you wish to join the people above in
working to create a world in which peace, justice and ecological sustainability
ultimately prevail for all life on Earth, you can do so by signing the online
pledge of 'The People's Charter to Create a Nonviolent World'https://thepeoplesnonviolencecharter.wordpress.com/ and participating in 'The Flame Tree
Project to Save Life on Earth'. http://tinyurl.com/flametree
Can we do it? If we do not try, we will
never know. And one day, fairly soon now according to some climate scientists
(and assuming we can avert nuclear war in the meantime), homo sapiens sapiens
will enter Earth's fossil record without even making a concerted effort to
prevent it.
Robert J.
Burrowes has a lifetime commitment to understanding and ending human violence.
He has done extensive research since 1966 in an effort to understand why human
beings are violent and has been a nonviolent activist since 1981. He is the
author of 'Why Violence?'http://tinyurl.com/whyviolence His email address is flametree@riseup.net and his website is here. http://robertjburrowes.wordpress.com
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