Medicine for Peace


In support of The United Nations Sept. 21 International Day of Peace, The Prem Rawat Foundation produced this video, “Medicine for Peace,” to help grow awareness that peace is possible for individuals across the planet. For more information visit http://www.tprf.org

In Swedish: En bank med jordbruksmark

För många unga människor som vill leva hållbart är tillgången till kapital ett problem. Svaret är en bank med jordbruksmark för unga människor som vill ägna sig åt hållbar matproduktion. Det har blivit verklighet i Frankrike. Sedan 2011 har organisationen Terre de Liens köpt över 3000 hektar mark som de arrenderar ut till 139 lantbruksföretag med olika inriktning. I närheten av Tours, 30 mil söder om Paris, ligger en av gårdarna – La Ferme du Cabri au Lait.

Läs mer på GrusoGuld.se

 

 

Prayers for Peace set to music to be performed in Assisi

Pope John Paul II organized the first World Day of Prayer for Peace in Assisi, Italy, on October 27, 1986. In all there were 160 religious leaders spending the day together with fasting and praying to their God or Gods. They represented 32 Christian religious organizations and 11 other non-Christian world religions.

Pope John Paul II, in October 27, 1986, invited representatives from 12 different religions to Assisi. Everyone was invited to bring a peace prayer from their tradition that was shared in conjunction with a ceremony. The Pope then invited another two meetings, 1993, after the war in Yugoslavia, and 2002 after the terrorist attacks in New York – then with a clear intention to gather to renounce war in the name of religion. Benedict XVI invited the fourth meeting in Assisi on October 27, 2011, 25 years after the first meeting.

The 12 prayers have been set to music by Swedish musician Peter Elmberg, in collaboration with Jan Eric Ström and Lars Magnus Österberg and presented in a variety of contexts in Norway and Sweden in recent years, and now scheduled to be performed in Assisi.

Below is an excerpt from each of the prayers.

Celebrate Peace Day! Follow PeaceCast tv!

 

PeaceCast.tv is an online media channel airing content provided by people and organizations worldwide engaged in new cultures of peace and prosperity.  We make visible the reality and possibility of peace in our time.

Streaming live as long as it’s Peace Day anywhere on the planet

Starts:  Sept 20 – 8:00 am EDT

Ends:  Sept 22 – 8:00 am EDT

PeaceCastLogoLearn more about Peace Day here

OPINION: Make the International Day of Peace on 21 Sept. Meaningful Through the Culture of Peace

The International Day of Peace (“Peace Day”) is observed around the world each year on 21 September. Established in 1981 by unanimous United Nations resolution, Peace Day provides a globally shared date for all humanity to commit to Peace above all differences and to contribute to building a Culture of Peace.

“Peace is a prerequisite for human development.… We all must undertake efforts to inculcate peace in ourselves. We cannot expect the world to change if we do not start first and foremost with changing ourselves — at the individual levels.”

Ambassador Anwarul K. Chowdhury, Bangladeshi diplomat and leading United Nations Culture of Peace emissary

About the Day of Peace, Ambassador Chowdry says:
“the culture of peace should be the most appropriate vehicle to
prepare our world in addressing effectively the complex challenges
of the twenty-first century.”

LEARN MORE


Ambassador Anwarul K. Chowdhury, the Honorary Chair of the IDP NGO Committee at the UN since 2008, has devoted many years as an inspirational champion for sustainable peace and development, and to ardently advancing the cause of the global movement for the culture of peace that has energized civil society all over the world.

As a career diplomat, Permanent Representative to United Nations, President of the UN Security Council, President of UNICEF Board, UN Under-Secretary-General, the Senior Special Advisor to the UN General Assembly President, and recipient of the U Thant Peace Award, UNESCO Gandhi Gold Medal for Culture of Peace, Spirit of the UN Award and University of Massachusetts Boston Chancellor’s Medal for Global Leadership for Peace, Ambassador Chowdhury has a wealth of experience in the critical issues of our time — peace, sustainable development, and human rights.

Ambassador Chowdhury’s legacy and leadership in advancing the best interest of the global community are boldly imprinted in his pioneering initiative in March 2000 as the President of the Security Council that achieved the political and conceptual breakthrough leading to the adoption of the groundbreaking UN Security Council Resolution 1325 in which the Council recognized for the first time the role and contribution of women in the area of peace and security.

He served as Ambassador and Permanent Representative of Bangladesh to the United Nations in New York from 1996 to 2001 and as the Under-Secretary-General and High Representative of the United Nations, responsible for the most vulnerable countries of the world from 2002 to 2007.

He has been the Chair of the International Drafting Committee on the Human Right to Peace; an initiative coordinated from Geneva and was a founding member of the Board of Trustees of the New York City Peace Museum.

He is the founder of the New York-based Global Movement for The Culture of Peace, and has been a part of the 12-member Wisdom Council of the Summer of Peace for the years 2012, 2013 and 2014, a worldwide participatory initiative to advance the Culture of Peace.

He has been decorated by the Government of Burkina Faso in West Africa with the country’s highest honour “L’Ordre National” in 2007 in Ouagadougou for his championship of the cause of the most vulnerable countries.

 

Die Grösste Geschäftsmöglichkeit auf Erden

Meinung:

Die größte Geschäftsmöglichkeit auf dem Planeten ist Frieden

Stephen Hinton 2016
Stephen Hinton foto: Maj-Lis Koivisto

Was die Kernaufgabe eines Business ist, wird schon lange debattiert. Einfach ausgedrückt könnte man sagen: Firmen  stellen Dienstleistungen, die wir brauchen, in solcher Weise bereit, dass Menschen eine Anstellung und Gehalt bekommen, damit sie im Gegenzug das kaufen können was sie benötigen.


Wenn das allerdings der Fall ist, funktioniert es nicht besonders gut, nicht wahr? Zwischenmenschliche Kontaktzeiten nahe null,  Gehälter unterhalb des Minimums und Jobs die ausgesourced werden, führen dazu, dass die Mehrheit nicht genug Geld in der Tasche hat um das Notwendigste zu kaufen. Das führt zu einer Depression des Marktes,  zu reduzierter Nachfrage und diese wiederum verringert die Geschäftsmöglichkeiten. Und es sieht so aus als ob auch die Menschen gestresst und deprimiert sind; selbst solche mit  Jobs und Geld. Könnte es sein, dass diesem Wirtschafts-und Geschäftsmodell derzeit genau das fehlt, was die Leute eigentlich möchten
. Continue reading “Die Grösste Geschäftsmöglichkeit auf Erden”

Fact follows fiction: news that coal miners will be retrained echoes theme from conference workshop

The Invest in Peace conference in July 2017 featured a fictive case of a town called Coaltown struggling to find its way out of the extractive fossil-fuel mindset into the regenerative, evergreen paradigm, (See the report from that workshop).

Featured on the PBS.org website, a news item features a  West Virginia nonprofit matching  displaced workers to sustainable jobs in agriculture or carpentry while helping them pursue associate degrees.

China aims to create an Eco-civilization

As reported on the website of reliefweb.int, a United nations report issued in May 2016 explains China’s commitment to  incorporate Eco-civilization into the “Five-in-One” blueprint of socialism with Chinese characteristics, which outlines “innovative, coordinated, green, open and shared development”. This blueprint has given great impetus to the implementation of Eco-civilization with environmental quality at its core aiming at “making the skies bluer, mountains greener, water cleaner, and the ecological environment better.

According to the report, China will be covering nearly a quarter of the country with forests by 2020.

Download the report “Green is Gold” here.(pdf)

 

New study shows looking after the soil is good for the climate

A new study from Northeastern University and nonprofit research organization The Organic Center (TOC), though, has reached the conclusion that soils from organic farms have 26 percent more potential for long-term carbon storage than soils from conventional farms, along with 13 percent more soil organic matter (SOM).

As reported in Civil Eats,  this study analyzed soil samples from over 700 conventional farms in 48 states. Chemists Elham Ghabbour and Geoffrey Davies  made the alarming discovery that these samples contained little to no humic substances. Humic substances are one portion of soil organic matter, which is made up of decomposing plant and animal matter. Humic substances are a major component of healthy, fertile soil, giving it structure and water-holding ability, among other things.  Ghabbour and Davies hypothesized that the lack of humic substances was due to the high-input practices inherent to conventional farming, such as tilling and the use of chemical fertilizers and pesticides.

Read the full article on Civil Eats