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Category Archives: Peace

International Day of Peace

This is a holiday that we should all celebrate everyday.

What: The International Day of Peace provides an opportunity for individuals, organizations and nations to create practical acts of Peace on a shared date. Use the International Day of Peace annually to highlight the Decade for a Culture of Peace and Non-Violence for the Children of the World, 2001 to 2010.

Established by a United Nations resolution in 1981, the International Day of Peace was first celebrated September 1982.

When: Annually, 21 September – The International Day of Peace

Where: Wherever you are.

Who: You and all who care about building Cultures of Peace for the children of this and future generations.

Why: To mark our individual and collective progress toward building Cultures of Peace, and serve as a reminder of our permanent commitment to Peace, above all interests and differences of any kind.

More information here

 
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Posted by on September 21, 2007 in Peace

 

So Where’s The Change?

As time has moved on, I’ve witnessed a lot of people come and go. They always seem to have good intentions, but, for one reason or another, the commitment just isn’t there. It’s no use asking where they went because they probably weren’t there in the first place. How can one possibly be “aware” when he/she is out of it 99% of the time? If anarchy’s nothing more than an excuse to get wasted and fall over, I’ll have no part of it.

Beware of the person who would rather listen to records instead of thinking for him/her self. The bombs will be dropping and they’ll be listening to their stereo.

Music is one of the greatest forms of free expression in the world today, and a powerful inspirational tool, but music, in itself, will never change a thing. The real change lies within you. Working for change requires thinking, creating, acting, writing, reading, learning, and, most of all, living.

If you aren’t right with yourself about what you’re doing, you’re wasting your time. The contradictions are endless. Don’t talk to me about unity if you’re not willing to join hands. Don’t talk to me about peace while you’re bashing heads. And please don’t bore me with half-witted statements about how things could be, if you’re not prepared to give ’em a fight.

IT’S TIME FOR US TO MAKE THINGS HAPPEN!
INCREASE THE PRESSURE TODAY AND TOMORROW WE’LL EXPLODE!

That was the intro to an old friend’s zine, Pressure #4, from around 1986. A couple more issues would come out before Jon folded it for good in 1988 (his zine ended up being the first place to publish any of my work; an act of kindness on his part for which I am eternally grateful). I lost touch with that friend (Jon) about a decade ago, and was thinking about him recently and decided to dust off some old zines from back in the day (for the kids out there, zines were the precursor to today’s blogs, and as a form of communication seem to have plenty of life left in them). A lot has changed in the last couple decades (we’d no longer be talking about records and stereos but rather mp3s and Ipods, for example), but a lot has remained constant. Folks with good intentions continue to come and go, giving plenty of half-witted statements about how things might be if only we vote for their candidate or donate Moveon.org before splitting for the greener pastures of exurbia.

Whether we’re talking about some dope lyrics from an aware band, or the words on a blog, keep in mind that these are tools that will hopefully inspire you to look at the world in a different way, or to make a difference in you particular corner of our aching planet. They do no good if you try to be a passive recipient – you have to think, feel, create, improvise on whatever you’re reading or listening to in order to get anywhere. That much, my friends, has not changed one bit since the days when an old friend was giving me a copy of his zine to check out.

The good news is that even in these dark days, there are many more good people than I could ever begin to count who are doing what they can to increase the pressure today. My old friend was on to something, as tomorrow we will explode.

 
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Posted by on May 4, 2007 in Peace

 

Jewish-Muslim Peace Walk This Sunday

If you’re free, this will be happening in downtown Tucson. It will be a great show of solidarity along with presentations on the history of both religious traditions here in southern Arizona.

Sunday afternoon’s fourth annual Jewish-Muslim Peace Walk for the first time will begin at a Downtown locale — the Historic Stone Avenue Temple, 564 S. Stone Ave. — and proceed north for 2 1/2 miles, ending at the Islamic Center of Tucson, 901 E. First St.

At least 200 walkers are expected. Organizers say they’ll stick to sidewalks, and no street closures will be required.

Though the walk itself isn’t scheduled to begin until 3:30 p.m., festivities start at the Stone Avenue Temple at 1:30, with a talk about Jewish history in Tucson, as well as henna painting, crafts, games, puppets and food.

more information from the Az Daily Star

 

Magnetic Words of Wisdom

From the magnet that sits a few feet away from me:

peace.

it does not mean to be in a place where there is no noise, trouble or hard work. it means to be in the midst of those things and still be calm in your heart.

(unknown)

Any volunteers to take the red marker out of my hand so you can draw a big giant F on my forehead?

The past few days have been a rollercoaster of emotions. I hadn’t even unpacked from my trip to D.C. when I found out that one of my best friends received orders for redeployment back to Iraq.

FUCK FUCK FUCKITY FUCK

Some days I wish that I could disappear deep into the mountains as a hermit and leave this world behind. Unfortunately the connections I’ve made with other human beings on this earth are too important for me to fully let go.

I would be a bad Buddhist.
Heh.

Again, and again, and again I will ask the question: Why must we kill one another?
Whether the death is physical or metaphorical – it matters not.

Misnomer

They speak of the art of war,
but the arts
draw their light from the soul’s well,
and warfare
dries up the soul and draws its power
from a dark and burning wasteland.
When Leonardo
set his genius to devising
machines of destruction he was not
acting in the service of art,
he was suspending
the life of art
over an abyss,
as if one were to hold
a living child out of an airplane window
at thirty thousand feet.

by Denise Levertov
USA (1923-1997)

 
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Posted by on February 6, 2007 in Peace