International Day of Peace- Journey to Smile Commitment

headerinternationaldayofpeace02

The United Nations’ International Day of Peace – marked every year on September 21 – is a global holiday when individuals, communities, nations and governments highlight efforts to end conflict and promote peace.

Established by U.N. resolution in 1982, “Peace Day” has grown to include millions of people around the world who participate in all kinds of events, large and small.

Our Journey to Smile has made a commitment to Peace on this day.
http://internationaldayofpeace.org/participate/events_calendar.html

Our Journey to Smile International Peace Day event : ‘half-marathon peace trek’ to the Shah Fuladi Hindu Kush mountain lakes. This will be held on the 25th September 2009 – in support and in remembrance of Peace in this region.

Our Journey to Smile will ‘gather’ all the youth peace volunteers.

Peace Volunteers- are wanted.

Our target is for a maximum of 200 peace trekkers, perhaps 100-150 Afghans and 50- 100 internationals.

Please mark and join in on the 25th of September for the ‘half-marathon peace trek’ to the Shah Fuladi Hindu Kush mountain lakes. On the Journey to smile. 

For Peace.

 

 

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Technorati Tags: afghanistan bamiyan, commitment to peace, international day of peace, journey to smile, peace day, Volunteer, volunteer for peace

Letter of Humanity’s Love from Afghan Youth to the UN Hague Conference 31/03/2009

March 30, 2009 by  
Filed under Journey Updates

hague-letter-pic

The Afghan youth’s dream of a kinder humanity

As it has been in the hesitant development of human civilization and history, the hearts of ordinary human beings may be ignored once again.

How long more?

How long more will Man accuse Man of being ‘evil’?

How long more will Man look at War and call it ‘good’?

How long more will Man pretend to uphold ideals he is un-true to?

How long more will we think ourselves to be ‘better’ humans?

How long more will humanity quench her conscience in defending eye-for-an-eye , power-hungry, and money-driven killing industries, while untenably holding on to her inhumane disguises of democracy and religion?

How long more will we justify self-importance and greed while marginalizing the ‘forgotten’ individuals just ‘off the map’?

How long more would we chase Names and Forms, knowing intuitively their impotence in addressing the disparity of justice within our own souls and walls?

How long more would we dictate every decision based on the gain of Money when we are losing the more noble and dignified responsibilities to the wider community and humanity?

How long more would we deceive ourselves by dreaming of peace while harboring hate and killing our ‘enemies’ while claiming love for them?

We, the youth of Afghanistan, having lived through some of the worst scenarios of the human condition, refuse to believe that humanity’s love, once given voice and shape, however minuscule and wherever practiced, cannot add dignity and magnanimity to Mankind.

So, we express humanity’s love today, not a love we own, but a love that causes humanity to smile, sing and dream, even in the darkest moments.

We express humanity’s love when we ask forgiveness on behalf of generations past and present, for the wrong we have done. We express humanity’s love by clearly saying that we forgive you too, whoever you may be, for the inadvertent or deliberate mistakes which you have made because of us and for your indifference to Mankind’s lives and Mankind’s deaths.

We express humanity’s love when we ask to be held accountable to treat all men and women alike and when we ask to be treated as humans, as you would treat yourselves.

We express humanity’s love when we grieve over every act of violence on any infant, child, youth or adult of any race, because we believe that God created all and that belief is powerful only when it leads us to grieve. In death, there is no distinction of civilian or military, intention or faith.

We express humanity’s love when, though you think it natural for us to hate or to be bitter, we choose kindness to the best of our hearts and take firm hold of the freedom which compassion gives us.

We express humanity’s love by thanking every individual who has worked to raise the possibility of peace. We know there are many who seek peace and believe that these make the majority and are deeply grateful to their labour of love and truth. Yak jahan tashakur!A w orld of thanks!

We express humanity’s love when we ask Man for creativity and courage to learn from history’s errors and to rise above the mundane and expected solutions to humanity’s problems today.

It may seem strange and insignificant that we, the youth of Afghanistan, have these thoughts and feelings.

But then you shouldn’t be too surprised; you have them too. Any human being does.

We wish to show you, in a flash of un-remembered history, that a humane love IS possible.

We wish for humanity to relate humanely though we cannot expect or demand it.

And even if you insist on thinking badly of us and wish to hurt us still, we will hold our smiles with confidence and hope that PEACE is the peacemaker’s eventual destiny, even if it were just a well-intentioned tale.

Stop. Please stop.

Listen. Please listen.

And journeying along with us, stand firm in a love that captures empathy, sorrow and joy with equal resolve and strength.

We are no longer willing for any one of you, any of us or any one of humanity to perish at Man’s hand, at our own hands.

We are no longer willing for ourselves or our elders to forget what Man could be and to remain self-absorbed in primitive motivations.

Because that hand which kills is shriveled and feeble and needs an artistic and thoughtful transformation into a hand of friendship.

We choose to smile at every child and person.

We choose to act with compassion.

We choose to deny the rough, proud, violent and resentful suggestions that haunt our corners and weaknesses.

For we all die and wish that when our time comes to leave our families and our world, we can witness a gentler world of civilities, of brotherhood, of friendship, of joy, of love and all those tender virtues lauded by the sages of our time, the valued men and women who would put themselves and their self-interests aside to imagine another universe.

A world not of the fables, but a world that is present, real and free.

To borrow the life of John Donne, ‘any Man’s death diminishes me because I am involved in Mankind, And therefore never send to know, for whom we smile…….we smile for Thee.’

Our Journey to Smile

http://ourjourneytosmile.com/blog/

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Technorati Tags: afghan youth, humanity, letter, love, UN, UN conference, United nations, United Nations Conference

Need Afghans Respond to Obama’s New Aghan Policy? -video

March 28, 2009 by  
Filed under Journey Updates

US rethinks Afghanistan strategy

BBC 28/03/09

obama-new-afg-policy

Flanked by military and civilian members of his top foreign policy team, President Barack Obama unveiled his eagerly awaited policy towards Afghanistan and Pakistan.

He said growing radical forces in the area posed the greatest threat to the American people and the world.

He said an extra 4,000 US personnel would train and bolster the Afghan army and police, and he would also provide support for civilian development.


Need Afghans respond at all to Obama’s new Afghan policy?


Need we at all?

Need we, Afghan youth who crave for peace, respond at all to Obama’s far-away decision over us, to send 4000 more human beings to train other human beings to kill even more human beings?

Need we ask any questions at all, since we are confident that whatever games are played in history, the love and conscience that sits in the kinder and less self-absorbed depths of every human heart, can change the devious adults in the very same hearts, and that this humane humanity can no longer be hidden?

Can a grave hide death, the snow hide spring and the sky hide space?

Our Journey to Smile

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Technorati Tags: afghan, afghan policy, afghanistan, obama, peace, peace policy, respond

Obama’s Iran appeal

March 27, 2009 by  
Filed under Journey Updates

  1. Al Jazeera News Network published our view 23/3/2009


Your views: Obama’s Iran appeal

Your views: Obama’s Iran appeal
obamaappeal

In a videotaped appeal, Barack Obama offered a “new beginning” in US-Iranian relations, calling for renewed exchanges and greater partnership. Iranian officials said action was needed to repair the relationship, but welcomed his words. Still, the US is at odds with Iran over its nuclear programme. Will Obama’s new approach towards Iran improve relations? What US policies need to be introduced in order to turn Obama’s words into action?

Published: Friday, 20 March 2009, 01:14 PM Mecca time, 10:14 AM GMT

Added: Monday, 23 March 2009, 09:25 AM Mecca time, 06:25 AM GMT

Dear Obama and Khamenei,
We address both of you respectfully as humans, fellow human beings who will, like all of us in Afghanistan, die with dignity some day.
We request forgiveness as the way forward, hoping that whatever the words we use, our trembling actions will be courageous in love we request of the quiet and concrete peace and vision that both you, Obama and Khamenei, and the rest of humanity, have been expressing since our hearts and imaginations have allowed us to.
We must no longer live meagerly in fear of the human instincts to claim right-ness and revenge. All of civilization now recognizes the value of our shared frailties and the dream of a kinder humanity.
This dream has no borders and as we retire for another night, hopefully to a brighter day, we will pray in both Persian and English that our children and youth would not be confined to or disappointed by your and our limitations.
This is Our Journey to Smile.
http://ourjourneytosmile.com/blog

Our Journey to Smile, Bamiyan, Afghanistan

http://english.aljazeera.net/your_views/americas/200932010147240822.html

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Technorati Tags: afghan youth, appeal, khamenei, letter, obama, peace

Letter to Obama and Khamenei from Afghan youth

March 27, 2009 by  
Filed under Journey Updates

A youthful Afghan dream?

afghan-youth

Obama and Khamenei overtures

Al Jazeera 21/3/2009 and 23/3/2009

In his video appeal to Iran on the 21st Of March 2009, Obama said: “This process will not be advanced by threats. We seek instead engagement that is honest and grounded in mutual respect.”

The press adviser to Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the Iranian president, urged Obama to back his words with concrete action to repair what he called past mistakes.

“They chant the slogan of change but no change is seen in practice. We haven’t seen any change,” Khamenei said.

Dear Obama and Khamenei,

We address both of you respectfully as humans, fellow human beings who will, like all of us in Afghanistan, die with dignity some day.

We request forgiveness as the way forward, hoping that whatever the words we use, our trembling actions will be courageous in love; we request of the quiet and concrete peace and vision that both you, Obama and Khamenei, and the rest of humanity, have been expressing since our hearts and imaginations have allowed us to.

We must no longer live meagerly in fear of the human instincts to claim right-ness and revenge. All of civilization now recognizes the value of our shared frailties and the dream of a kinder humanity.

This dream has no borders and as we retire for another night, hopefully to a brighter day, we will pray in both Persian and English that our children and youth would not be confined to or disappointed by your and our limitations.

This is Our Journey to Smile.

With sincerity,

Our Journey to Smile

http://ourjourneytosmile.com/blog/

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Technorati Tags: afghan youth, change, humanity, khamenei, letter, mutual respect, obama, peace

International Peace Day Commitment by Our Journey to Smile

March 26, 2009 by  
Filed under Journey Updates

Peace One Day works to create global awareness of the day and manifest life-saving activity and individual action throughout the world on September 21 each year.

The International Peace Day and commitments to peace by individuals and groups  is changing lives.

Lives are being saved and individuals are making commitments.

This is their response to Our Journey to Smile, as we make our commitment to peace.

“21323 Our Journey to Smile, Afghanistan
We will gather afghan youth and international volunteers at the World Heritage Bamiyan Buddhas”

Dear Friends at Our Journey to Smile,

Thank you for your email and your commitment to Peace Day.  I have successfully logged your commitment on our Peace Wall.

If you’d like to see your commitment on our website, you can visit www.peaceoneday.org/commitment.aspx and your commitment number is 21323.

I realize campaigning for peace can be quite difficult at times, but we wish you every success in making your commitment a reality.  I would suggest you target university students around the world, send them letters to join.

With regards to your request to the UN, I am not sure how Peace One Day could assist you, as our work is also on trying to communicate with all its agencies.  But please, keep us updated on all your plans for Peace Day as we would love to hear more about it.

Thank you for your support.

Best Regards,

In Peace

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Technorati Tags: bamiyan buddhas, world heritage bamiyan buddhas

Aren’t Afghans Humans too?

March 26, 2009 by  
Filed under Journey Updates

We are humans

We are proud to be Afghans

Freedom is a basic foundation of every human being and of all individuals

We ask for the right to live decently, freely.

We wish for peace, freedom, humanity.

Aren’t we humans?

Aren’t Afghans humans?

Aren’t we humans too?

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Technorati Tags: afghanistan, afghans, decent life, decent living, freedom, human beings, humanity, InHumanity- Struggles, peace, right to happiness

Afghans Smile for Love Forgiveness Peace Humanity

March 26, 2009 by  
Filed under Journey Updates

Can we smile?

Despite the war, the suffering, the inhumanity?

Why did they kill my father?

They didn’t even know him.

Why do they make guns instead of bread?

Why?  why? Why?

We wish for peace.

We wish for humanity.

We will all die one day.

What can we do now?

love, forgiveness, peace, humanity

Can we?

Can we all?

We long for peace, for humane relations, for a decent life.

We want to smile.

volunteer to create smiles

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Technorati Tags: Add new tag, afghan, afghanistan, forgiveness, journey to peace, journey to smile, love, middle east, peace building, possibility of love

US veteran “cowardly” in conscientiously objecting or brave

March 19, 2009 by  
Filed under Journey Updates

andre-shepherd

Even if the Iraq war had a just cause, will humanity condemn a man for refusing to kill again?

If Obama were an ordinary Iraqi citizen, would he mind if an American refused to kill his daughter?

Asylum dilemma for US deserter

BBC 190309

American Iraq veteran Andre Shepherd is applying for the right of asylum in Germany. “I could no longer support this illegal war in Iraq with a clear conscience,” explained the 31-year-old.

According to anti-war campaigners, more than 25,000 US soldiers have deserted since the invasion of Iraq in 2003. Although only 30 of them now live in Germany, they can count on substantial support here.

The accusation of “coward” is one of the least offensive things Mr Shepherd is being called online.

“Your home country will always think you are a traitor, whether you were justified or not,” Mr Shepherd explained.

“Although my family is supporting me, they wish I’d taken a different step, because the potential for me not returning [home] causes a lot of emotional stress. I have to apologize to my parents for that.”

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Technorati Tags: courage

Is Humanity Dead to Deaths?

March 17, 2009 by  
Filed under Journey Updates

Afghan boys killed

Are we ‘dead’ to deaths?

Do we become ‘aware’ of death only when our own loved ones die violently?

Is death a number?

Al Jazeera 14032009

Military surge no solution in Afghanistan

General David Petraeus, the head of US Central Command, has said that a mass influx of troops like that during the so-called “surge” in Iraq is not the answer to Afghanistan’s spiralling violence.

A UN report said, “The government, security forces and population of Afghanistan, along with its international partners, face a critical test in 2009.”

“Security has continued to deteriorate. The results of government and international aid efforts have fallen short of popular expectations as Afghans suffer the effects of drought and a global rise in food prices.”

The UN report also identified the rise in civilian deaths as a major problem.

The number of civilians killed rose 40 per cent last year to 2,118. Most of the deaths were caused by anti-government fighters, but 39 per cent were caused by international and Afghan government forces.

Is there a difference between a ‘civilian’ death and a ‘soldier/police’ death?

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