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Holiday Greetings

Dear Readers,
I hope your Christmas or Sacrifice Holiday is blessed with loved ones around you, peace in your soul and success and happiness for the New Year.
I also wish that we all have the awareness that many around the world may not be as happy or peaceful as we are in our homes during this time. Please reach out to those you meet and send positive energy to the universe for healing, health and peaceful times in our New Year.

Posted by Bea on December 24, 2006 in Peace | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Peace Song and Book for Peace Day

If you have been reading my blog, you know that on September 21, 2006, I was one of the organizers of a Culture of Peace event for International Peace Day sponsored by Bahcesehir University, http://www.bahcesehir.edu.tr, in Istanbul. In collaboration with Deniz Kite, a mediator, http://www.inmit.com.tr, and Joti Kohli, a university lecturer, we presented the first Peace Day event at the university.

The event included a slide presentation on peace leaders, both known and unknown; a discussion on how to bring about peaceful relations in our daily lives; four of the major religious leaders in Turkey sharing thoughts on peace through the eyes of their religion; and a concert by Anjalika Akbar, an internationally-recognized pianist, http://remarkablesolutions.typepad.com/publishing/2006/09/event_for_inter.html.

As part of that event, Deniz Kite wrote lyrics to a Peace Song, and now the video clip is available online for your enjoyment and comments. Lyrics were composed and arranged by Burak Uckun, http://www.burakuckun.com, an Istanbul composer and singer.

Click below to hear the Culture of Peace song and let us know what you think.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2P8hV99cw40 

As part of this Culture of Peace Project, Deniz Kite wrote a book of poetry, The Joy of a Child, published by Kul Sanat Publishing, http://www.kulyayin.com in Ankara and edited by yours truly, http://www.remarkablesolutions.com. It is a collection of unusual poetry based on what we see in our lives each day and how we interpret and feel about what we see. All sales proceeds go to support this Peace Project.

Enjoy the music and add your comments by clicking on comments below this posting.

Posted by Bea on October 13, 2006 in Books, Event, Music, Peace, Publishing | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Event for International Peace Day

Istanbul is the stage for a day of peace-building activities from 17:00 to 22:00 on 21 September 2006, sponsored by Bahcesehir University and the Mediator's Association in Turkey. The event will be held at the Bahcesehir University Besiktas Campus and all are welcome to come.

Peace, cooperation, healing and friendship will emanate from these activities with the hope of building an awareness of peaceful co-existence in Turkey. The culmination of these activities will be a free concert given by internationally-known pianist, Ms. Anjalika Akbar. A moment of silence will be observed with a candle-lighting ceremony to project peace into our world in recognition of the International Day of Peace, first established in 1981 with a United Nations resolution.

A slide presentation and discussion about the peace movement, key leaders and the lesser known peace builders in the world will confirm that a noted peace figure does not have to be a celebrity or wealthy person to impact a nation or even a neighborhood. Every individual counts when it comes to promoting peace in all areas of life. A cocktail will follow this presentation.

It is a well-known fact that individual peace and happiness is not associated with one's rise to wealth or state of poverty. It doesn't matter whether you are a jetsetter in Los Angeles or a commoner in India; a person's inner peace creates the same serenity in those around them. Conversely, those who have no peace or preoccupy themselves with adversity force that same conflict to others near them.

Let's look for a moment at some examples of peace and conflict side-by-side. Just a few weeks ago, we saw where one instance of poor judgment−the kidnapping of an Israeli soldier−resulted in chaos, demise and conflict among Palestine, Lebanon and Israel with hundreds of deaths as a result.

Then, in the evacuation, we saw a Turkish rescue ship fired upon by Israel going from Beirut to Magusa. Yet when the evacuees arrived safely on Turkish soil, a Turkish soldier was found greeting a small boy with a kiss on his cheek. Peace and conflict as neighbors.

During this time I wrote a letter to Ambassador Bolton to express my disbelief that a 'cease-fire was not the right thing at the right time'. Does it not make sense that if we are to end fighting and find lasting solutions for peace, it should begin with an immediate cease-fire and disarming?

Now, this same issue is also spurring debate here in Turkey. We face attitudes in the peace and conflict arena on both an individual and governmental scale. What is it? Gun Use−guns for gifts, guns to celebrate, guns to threaten, guns to kill. Worse yet, gun use promotion exists all the while hundreds of lives are lost each year in Turkey.

How would you like to see a loved one killed on their wedding day because of some senseless act of firing a gun to celebrate something wonderful? Yet at the same time, a Turkish father stands up and says, "We should bring up our children with love and respect." While the annual death and injury toll proves careless firings of weapons leaves families in pieces each year, our national officials accept guns as gifts in the name of Turkish culture and history. How can this be so? Peace and conflict as strange bedfellows.

So, as we see with these few examples, we are challenged in this day and age to create peaceful solutions to daily situations which can only change for the better if we first change our own attitudes and actions from inside ourselves which, in turn, will project outwards to those around us.

We hope this Day of Peaceful activities will trigger a peace movement in Turkey of its own kind and begin dialogue in every corner of the country to talk about peace, create peaceful solutions to conflict, and ultimately, build a more peaceful Turkey for ages to come.

"Peace at Home; Peace in the World" – Mustafa Kemal Ataturk

Posted by Bea on September 18, 2006 in Cultural Differences, Current Affairs, Education, Event, Peace, Religion | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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