Buenos Aires
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What you’ll hear a lot less about, however, is what is sometimes known
as World Peace Day. That’s right, the annual event officially known as the
International Day of Peace is today and, with unfortunately few exceptions, the
world is oblivious to its existence.
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Instead, I’m sorry to say, we are today much more attuned to war—which
most world powers continued to glorify (as long as it’s not their people on the
receiving end of the violence)—than to peace and much more aware of days
marking the anniversaries of major wars than this one, which, rather futilely,
seeks to bring the topic of world peace to the fore. Indeed, we are today
facing the worst conditions for world peace since the Cold War Era, and the
world is on the brink of the kind of circumstances that could lead to a
catastrophic international conflict and that are similar to, and unprecedented
since, the unleashing of World War I.
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As donor of the UN Peace Bell, post-World War II Japan has, indeed, been
one of the countries that have done the most to promote world peace.
Unfortunately, in keeping with the sign of our chaotic times, the Japanese
government recently announced its bid to add Japanese forces to the War on
Terror coalition, a move which, on the surface, might appear defensive enough,
but which carries with it the underlying possibility of reconverting Japan into
yet another world-class military power. Fortunately, the Japanese public in
general still holds the horrible cost of war fresh in its memory, and protests
against the government’s militarization pretensions have been immediate and
clear-cut.
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The truth about the new millennium to date has been a bitter
disappointment to those of us who advocate world peace. So true is this that
last year, 2014, bore all of the terrifying hallmarks of the climate of 1914,
when the planet was on the verge of the first of the two most devastating
pan-conflicts in the history of the world, the two of which, fought in the
first half of the 20th century, cost the lives of a combined total
of over 100 million people. And 2015 has begun to show us some of the results
of our folly in the form of the largest worldwide migrant and refugee crisis
since World War II.
If anything, we appear more obtuse, more obsessed with war and
international rivalry, more invested in the worldwide arms industry, more
vulnerable to false patriotism and the glorification of war, and blinder to the
deterioration of our planet and to proper conditions for healthy human life
than ever before. With what we should know by now about the results of war, the
consequences of environmental degradation, and the futility of armed conflict
as any sort of “solution” to international disagreements, we would appear to be
more bent on taking an obstinate road toward self-destruction as a species than
on putting what we’ve learned to good use in creating an ever-better, more
peaceful and more sustainable world in which to live.
One of the slogans of the International Day of Peace is a quote by
Mahatma Gandhi that goes: “There is no road towards peace; peace is the road.” By this stage, we should surely be past the path-seeking
stage and be firmly on the road to world peace and mutually beneficial
cooperation.
In 2013, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon proclaimed the theme of that
year’s World Pace Day to be peace education as a means of bringing about a
culture of peace. And indeed, if a path to world peace and cooperation exists—and
I believe that through intensive worldwide activism it can—then peace education
at every level is the answer, the only answer that can lift humanity from the
mire of conflict and permit it to save itself from eventual self-destruction.
As individuals—common, everyday civilians with everything to lose and
nothing to gain from engaging in wars with our human sisters and brothers
around the world—we need to shake off the isolation and political autism in
which we have allowed ourselves to be immersed. We need to stop giving lip-service
to our desire for peace while at the same time shrugging our shoulders and
claiming there’s nothing we as individuals can do to achieve it. We need to
embrace empathy and feel in our own skin the plight of every person that war
renders homeless, every would-be refugee clawing at the razor-wire walls of
Europe, every abused and starving refugee child, every man, woman or child shelled,
shot or torn to shreds by bombs and shrapnel, because no one today is safe any
longer from the ravages of war and armed combat.
In order to achieve world peace and cooperation, we need to be willing
to clear our minds, reject the siren song of “political expediency” and form a
common front of common citizens for peace. We must be willing to reject calls
to arms, to protest the use of force, to refuse our votes to anyone who calls
for aggression, to dissuade ourselves of the fictitious idea of “the glory of war”
and to unite in organizations that sponsor peace education, peaceful protest
and civil disobedience as means of stripping governments of the power of
murdering other peoples in our names and getting us murdered in the process.
Peace can only come with a change of mindset, and each of us has to
be willing to say, “Let it start with me,” and do everything in our power to
effect that change, one soul at a time.
May peace be with you on this and every day.
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