CIU's plan for bringing peace on earth in the third
millennium
Teaching Peace, Mercy and Tolerance in the
Twentyfirst Century
Let us, first of all, try to discuss and diagnose
intolerance among members of the society for locating
respective critical paths for being merciful and tolerant
for bringing peace on earth in the twentyfirst century and
the third millennium. Viewing the growing peacelessness and
intolerance all over the world, let us also discuss the need
for disaster education including disaster preparedness,
mitigation and management.
Educating the children and young people with a sense of
openness and comprehension towards other people, their
diverse culture and histories and their fundamental shared
humanity; teaching them the importance of refusing violence
and adopting peaceful means for resolving disagreements and
conflicts; forging in the next generation feelings of
altruism, openness and respect towards others, solidarity
and sharing based on a sense of security in one's own
identity and a capacity to recognise the many dimensions of
being human in different cultural and social context should
be the main thrust during the deliberations on peace, mercy
and tolerance. Let us discuss these matters in a greater
detail :
1. The manifestations of violence, racism, xenophobia,
aggressive nationalism and violations of human rights, by
religious intolerance, by the upsurge of terrorism in all
its forms and manifestations and by the growing gap
separating wealthy countries from poor countries, phenomena
which threaten the consolidation of peace, tolerant
behaviour and democracy both nationally and internationally
and which are all obstacles to development are matters of
deep concern.
2. The educational plans and policies have to contribute to
the development of understanding, solidarity and tolerance
among individuals and among ethnic, social, cultural and
religious groups and sovereign nations. Education should
promote knowledge, values, attitudes and skills conducive to
respect for human rights and to an active commitment to the
defence of such rights and to the building of a culture of
peace, tolerance and mercy.
3. We are aware of the great responsibility incumbent not
only on parents, but on society as a whole, to work together
with all those involved in the educational system, and with
non-governmental organisations, so as to achieve full
implementation of the objectives of education for peace,
human rights and civil liberty and to contribute in this way
to sustainable development and to a culture of peace.
4. We understand the need to seek synergies between the
formal education system and the various sectors of
non-formal education, which are helping to make a reality of
education that is in conformity with the aims of "Education
for All". We know of the decisive role that also falls to
non-formal educational organisations in the process of
forming the personalities of young people.
5. Accordingly we should strive resolutely to base education
on principles and methods that contribute to the development
of the personality of pupils, students and adults who are
respectful of their fellow human beings and determined to
promote peace, non violence, mercy, compassion and
tolerance; to take suitable steps to establish in
educational institutions an atmosphere contributing to the
success of education for international understanding, so
that they become ideal places for the exercise of tolerance,
respect for the rights, the practice of democracy and
learning about the diversity and wealth of cultural
identities.
6. Action should be taken to eliminate all direct and
indirect discrimination against girls and women in education
systems and to take specific measures to ensure that they
achieve their full potential.
7. There is an urgent need to give special attention to
improving curricula, the content of textbooks, and other
educational materials including new technologies, with a
view to educating caring and responsible citizens open to
other cultures, able to appreciate the value of freedom,
respectful of human dignity and differences, and able to
prevent conflicts or resolve them by non-violent means.
8. Measures must be adopted to enhance the role and status
of educators in formal and non-formal education and to give
priority to pre-service and in-service training as well as
the retraining of educational personnel, including planners
and managers, oriented notably towards professional ethics,
civic and moral education, cultural diversity, national
codes and internationally recognised standards of human
rights and fundamental freedoms.
9. The development of innovative strategies adapted to the
new challenges of educating responsible citizens committed
to peace, human rights, democracy and sustainable
development, and to apply appropriate measures of evaluation
and assessment of these strategies should be encouraged.
10. In a period of transition and accelerated change marked
by the expression of intolerance, manifestations of racial
and ethnic hatred, the upsurge of terrorism in all its
forms, discrimination, war, violence and the growing
disparities between rich and poor, at international and
national levels alike, action strategies must aim both at
ensuring fundamental freedoms, peace, human rights, and
democracy and at promoting sustainable and equitable
economic and social development, all of which have an
essential part to play in building a culture of peace. This
calls for a transformation of the traditional styles of
educational action.
11. The ultimate goal of education for peace, mercy and
tolerance is the development in every individual of a sense
of universal values and types of behaviour on which a
culture of peace is predicated. It is possible to identify
even in different socio-cultural context values that are
likely to be universally recognised.
12. Education must develop the ability to value freedom and
the skills to meet its challenges. This means preparing
citizens to cope with difficult and uncertain situations and
fitting them for personal autonomy and responsibility.
Awareness of personal responsibility must be linked to
recognition of the value of civic commitment, of joining
together with others to solve problems and to work for a
just, peaceful and democratic community.
13. Education must develop the ability to recognise and
accept the values which exist in the diversity of
individuals, genders, peoples and cultures and develop the
ability to communicate, share and co-operate with others.
The citizens of a pluralist society and multicultural world
should be able to accept that their interpretation of
situations and problems is rooted in their personal lives,
in the history of their society and in their cultural
traditions; that, consequently, no individual or group holds
the only answer to problems; and that for each problem there
may be more than one solution. Therefore, people should
understand and respect each other and negotiate on an equal
footing, with a view to seeking common ground. Thus
education must reinforce personal identity and should
encourage the convergence of ideas and solutions which
strengthen peace, friendship and solidarity between
individuals and people.
14. Education must develop the ability of non-violent
conflict-resolution. It should therefore promote also the
development of inner peace in the minds of learners so that
they can establish more firmly the qualities of tolerance,
compassion, sharing and caring.
15. Education must cultivate in citizens the ability to make
informed choices, basing their judgements and actions not
only on the analysis of present situations but also on the
vision of a preferred future.
16. Education must teach citizens to respect the cultural
heritage, protect the environment, and adopt methods of
production and patterns of consumption, which lead to
sustainable development. Harmony between individual and
collective values and between immediate basic needs and
long-term interests is also necessary. Education should
cultivate feelings of solidarity and equity at the national
and international levels in the perspective of a balanced
and long-term development.
17. Strategies relating to education for peace, mercy,
tolerance and disaster education must (a) be comprehensive
and holistic, which means addressing a very broad range of
factors; (b) be applicable to all types, levels and forms of
education; (c) involve all educational partners and various
agents of socialisation, including NGOs and community
organisations; (d) be implemented locally, nationally,
regionally and world-wide; (e) entail modes of management
and administration, co-ordination and assessment that give
greater autonomy to educational establishments so that they
can work out specific forms of action and linkage with the
local community, encourage the development of innovations
and foster active and democratic participation by all those
concerned in the life of the establishment; (f) be suited to
the age and psychology of the target group and take account
of the evolution of the learning capacity of each
individual; (g) be applied on a continuous and consistent
basis. Results and obstacles have to be assessed, in order
to ensure that strategies can be continuously adapted to
changing circumstances; (h) include proper resources for
education as a whole and specially for marginalised and
disadvantaged groups.
18. To strengthen the formation of values and abilities such
as solidarity, creativity, civic responsibility, the ability
to resolve conflicts by non-violent means, and critical
acumen, it is necessary to introduce into curricula, at all
levels, true education for citizenship which includes an
international dimension. Teaching should particularly
concern the conditions for the construction of peace; the
various forms of conflict, their causes and effects; the
ethical, religious and philosophical bases of human rights,
their historical sources, the way they have developed and
how they have been translated into national and
international standards, such as in the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, the Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women and
the Convention on the Rights of the Child; the bases of
democracy and its various institutional models; the problem
of racism and the history of the fight against sexism and
all the other forms of discrimination and exclusion.
Particular attention should be devoted to culture, the
problem of development and the history of every people, as
well as to the role of the United Nations and international
institutions. There must be education for peace, conflict
resolution, non violence, mercy, compassion and tolerance.
It cannot, however, be restricted to specialised subjects
and knowledge. The whole of education must transmit this
message and the atmosphere of the institution must be in
harmony with the application of democratic standards.
Likewise, curriculum reform should emphasise knowledge,
understanding and respect for the culture of others at the
national and global levels and should link the global
interdependence of problems to local action. In view of
religious and cultural differences, every country may decide
which approach to ethical education best suits its cultural
context.
19. All people engaged in educational action must have
adequate teaching materials and resources at their disposal.
In this connection, it is necessary to make the required
revisions to textbooks to remove negative stereotypes and
distorted views. International co-operation in producing
textbooks could be encouraged. Whenever new teaching
materials, textbooks and the like are to be produced, they
should be designed with due consideration of new situations.
The textbooks should offer different perspectives on a given
subject and make transparent the national or cultural
background against which they are written. Their content
should be based on scientific findings. It would be
desirable for the documents of United Nations institutions
to be widely distributed and used in educational
establishments, especially in countries where the production
of teaching materials is proving slow owing to economic
difficulties. Distance education technologies and all modern
communication tools must be placed at the service of
education for peace, non violence, mercy, compassion and
tolerance.
20. It is essential for the development of education for
peace, non violence, mercy, compassion and tolerance that
reading and verbal and written expression programmes should
be considerably strengthened. A comprehensive grasp of
reading, writing and the spoken word enables citizens to
gain access to information, to understand clearly the
situation in which they are living, to express their needs,
and to take part in activities in the social environment. In
the same way, learning foreign languages offers a means of
gaining a deeper understanding of other cultures, which can
serve as a basis for building better understanding between
communities and between nations.
21. Proposals for educational change find their natural
place in schools and classrooms. Teaching and learning
methods, forms of action and institutional policy lines have
to make peace, non violence, mercy, compassion and tolerance
both a matter of daily practice and something that is
learned. With regard to methods, the use of active methods,
group work, the discussion of moral issues and personalised
teaching should be encouraged. As for institutional policy
lines, efficient forms of management and participation must
promote the implementation of democratic school management,
involving teachers, pupils, parents and the local community
as a whole.
22. The reduction of failure must be a priority. Therefore,
education should be adapted to the individual student’s
potential. The developments of self-esteem, as well as
strengthening the will to succeed in learning, are also
basic necessities for achieving a higher degree of social
integration. Greater autonomy for schools implies greater
responsibility on the part of teachers and the community for
the results of education. However, the different development
levels of education systems should determine the degree of
autonomy in order to avoid a possible weakening of
educational content.
23. The training of personnel at all levels of the education
system: teachers, planners, managers, teacher educators has
to include education for peace, non violence, mercy,
compassion and tolerance. This pre-service and in-service
training and retraining should introduce and apply in situ
methodologies, observing experiments and evaluating their
results. In order to perform their tasks successfully,
schools, institutions of teacher education and those in
charge of non-formal education programmes should seek the
assistance of people with experience in the fields of peace,
non violence, mercy, compassion and tolerance (politicians,
jurists, sociologists and psychologists) and of the NGOs
specialised in human rights, environment and disaster
education. Similarly, pedagogy and the actual practice of
exchanges should form part of the training courses of all
educators.
24. Teacher education activities must fit into an overall
policy to upgrade the teaching profession. International
experts, professional bodies and teachers’ unions should be
associated with the preparation and implementation of action
strategies because they have an important role to play in
promoting a culture of peace among teachers themselves.
25. Specific strategies for the education of vulnerable
groups and those recently exposed to conflict or in a
situation of open conflict are required as a matter of
urgency, giving particular attention to children at risk and
to girls and women subjected to sexual abuse and other forms
of violence. Possible practical measures could include, for
example, the organisation outside the conflict zone of
specialised forums and workshops for educators, family
members and mass media professionals belonging to the
conflicting groups and an intensive training activity for
educators in post-conflict co-operation with governments
whenever possible.
26. The organisations of education programmes for abandoned
children, street children, refugee and displaced children
and economically and sexually exploited children are a
matter of urgency. It is equally urgent to organise special
youth programmes laying emphasis on participation by
children and young people in solidarity actions and
environmental protection. In addition, efforts should be
made to address the special needs of people with learning
difficulties by providing them with relevant education in a
non- exclusionary and integrated educational setting.
27. Furthermore, in order to create understanding between
different groups in society, there must be respect for the
educational rights of persons belonging to national or
ethnic, religious and linguistic minorities, as well as
indigenous people, and this must also have implications in
the curricula and methods and in the way education is
organised.
28. New problems require new solutions. It is essential to
work out strategies for making better use of research
findings, to develop new teaching methods and approaches and
to improve co-ordination in choosing research themes between
research institutes in the social sciences and education in
order to address in a more relevant and effective way the
complex nature of education for peace, non violence, mercy,
compassion and tolerance. The effectiveness of educational
management should be enhanced by research on decision-making
by all those involved in the educational process
(government, teachers, parents, etc.). Research should also
be focused on finding new ways of changing public attitudes
towards human rights, in particular towards women, and
environmental issues. The impact of educational programmes
may be better assessed by developing a system of indicators
of results, setting up data banks on innovative experiments,
and strengthening systems for disseminating and sharing
information and research findings, nationally and
internationally.
29. Higher education institutions can contribute in many
ways to education for peace, non violence, mercy, compassion
and tolerance. In this connection, the introduction into the
curricula of knowledge, values and skills relating to peace,
human rights, justice, the practice of democracy,
professional ethics, civic commitment and social
responsibility should be envisaged. Educational institutions
at this level should also ensure that students appreciate
the interdependence of nations in an increasingly global
society.
30. The education of citizens cannot be the exclusive
responsibility of the education sector. If it is to be able
to do its job effectively in this field, the education
sector should closely co-operate, in particular, with the
family, the media, including traditional channels of
communication, the world of voluntary organisations and
NGOs.
31. Concerning co-ordination between school and family,
measures should be taken to encourage the participation of
parents in school activities. Furthermore, education
programmes for adults and the community in general in order
to strengthen the school’s work are essential.
32. The influence of the media in the socialisation of
children and young people is increasingly being
acknowledged. It is, therefore, essential to train teachers
and prepare students for the critical analysis and use of
the media, and to develop their competence to profit from
the media by a selective choice of programmes. On the other
hand, the media should be urged to promote the values of
peace, respect for human rights, democracy and tolerance, in
particular by avoiding programmes and other products that
incite hatred, violence, cruelty and disrespect for human
dignity.
33. Young people who spend a lot of time outside school and
who often do not have access to the formal education system,
or to vocational training or a job, as well as young people
doing their military service, are a very important target
group of education programmes for peace, non violence,
mercy, compassion and tolerance. While seeking improved
access to formal education and vocational training, it is
therefore essential for them to be able to receive
non-formal education adapted to their needs, which would
prepare them to assume their role as citizens in a
responsible and effective way. In addition, education for
peace, human rights and respect for the law has to be
provided for young people in prisons, reformatories or
treatment centres.
34. Adult education programmes where NGOs have an important
role to play should make everyone aware of the link between
local living conditions and world problems. Basic education
programmes should attach particular importance to subject
matter relating to peace. All culturally suitable media such
as folklore, popular theatre, community discussion groups
and radio should be used in mass education.
35. The promotion of peace will require regional
co-operation, international solidarity and the strengthening
of co-operation between international and governmental
bodies, non-governmental organisations, the scientific
community, business circles, industry and the media. This
solidarity and co- operation must help the developing
countries to meet their needs for promoting education for
peace.
36. In the light of the information provided relating peace,
mercy, tolerance and disaster education we must the
following resolve :
i) Alarmed by the current rise in acts of intolerance,
violence, terrorism, xenophobia, aggressive nationalism,
racism, anti-semitism, exclusion, marginalisation and
discrimination directed against national, ethnic, religious
and linguistic minorities, refugees, migrant workers,
immigrants and vulnerable groups within societies, as well
as acts of violence and intimidation committed against
individuals exercising their freedom of opinion and
expression - all of which threaten the consolidation of
peace, mercy, tolerance and disaster management efforts both
nationally and internationally, and are obstacles to
development.
ii) Resolving to take all positive measures necessary to
promote peace, mercy and tolerance in our societies, because
these are not only the cherished principles, but also a
necessity for peace and for the economic and social
advancement of all peoples.
iii) Mercy and Tolerance are respect, acceptance and
appreciation of the rich diversity of our world’s cultures,
our forms of expression and ways of being human. It is
fostered by knowledge, openness, communication, and freedom
of thought, conscience and belief. Mercy and Tolerance are
harmony in difference. These are not only a moral duty, but
are also political and legal requirements. Mercy and
Tolerance, the virtues that make peace possible, contribute
to the replacement of the culture of war by a culture of
peace.
iv) Mercy and Tolerance are not concession, condescension or
indulgence. Mercy and Tolerance are, above all, active
attitudes prompted by recognition of the universal human
rights and fundamental freedoms of others. In no
circumstance can these be used to justify infringements of
these fundamental values. Mercy and Tolerance are to be
exercised by individuals, groups and nations.
v) Mercy and Tolerance are the responsibility that upholds
human rights, pluralism (including cultural pluralism),
democracy and the rule of law. It involves the rejection of
dogmatism and absolutism and affirms the standards set out
in international human rights instruments.
vi) Consistent with respect for rights, the practice of
mercy and tolerance does not mean toleration of social
injustice or the abandonment or weakening of one’s
convictions. It means that one is free to adhere to one’s
own convictions and accepts that others adhere to theirs. It
means accepting the fact that human beings, naturally
diverse in their appearance, situation, speech, behaviour
and values, have the right to live in peace and to be as
they are. It also means that one’s views are not to be
imposed on others.
vii) Mercy and Tolerance require just and impartial
legislation, law enforcement, judicial and administrative
processes. It also requires that economic and social
opportunities be made available to each person without any
discrimination. Exclusion and marginalisation can lead to
frustration, hostility and fanaticism.
viii) In order to achieve a more tolerant society, nations
should ratify existing international human rights
conventions, and draft new legislation where necessary to
ensure equality of treatment and of opportunity for all
groups and individuals in society.
ix) It is essential for international harmony that
individuals, communities and nations accept and respect the
multicultural character of the human family. Without mercy
and tolerance there can be no peace, and without peace there
can be no development.
x) Intolerance may take the form of marginalization of
vulnerable groups and their exclusion from social and
political participation, as well as violence and
discrimination against them. Declaration on Race and Racial
Prejudice confirms ‘All individuals and groups have the
right to be different’.
xi) In the modern world, mercy and tolerance are more
essential than ever before. It is an age marked by the
globalisation of the economy and by rapidly increasing
mobility, communication, integration and inter-dependence,
large-scale migrations and displacement of populations,
urbanisation and changing social patterns. Since every part
of the world is characterised by diversity, escalating
intolerance and strife potentially menaces every region. It
is not confined to any country, but is a global threat.
xii) Mercy and Tolerance are necessary between individuals
and at the family and community levels. Tolerance promotion
and the shaping of attitudes of openness, mutual listening
and solidarity should take place in schools and universities
and through non-formal education, at home and in the
workplace. The communication media are in a position to play
a constructive role in facilitating free and open dialogue
and discussion, disseminating the values of tolerance, and
highlighting the dangers of indifference towards the rise in
intolerant groups and ideologies.
xiii) Appropriate scientific studies and networking should
be undertaken to co-ordinate the international community’s
response to this global challenge, including analysis by the
social sciences of root causes and effective
countermeasures, as well as research and monitoring in
support of policy-making and standard-setting action by
different countries
xiv) Education is the most effective means of preventing
intolerance. The first step in mercy and tolerance education
is to teach people what their shared rights and freedoms
are, so that they may be respected, and to promote the will
to protect those of others.
xv) Education for mercy and tolerance should be considered
an urgent imperative; that is why it is necessary to promote
systematic and rational mercy and tolerance teaching methods
that will address the cultural, social, economic, political
and religious sources of intolerance which are the major
roots of violence and exclusion. Education policies and
programmes should contribute to development of
understanding, solidarity and tolerance among individuals as
well as among ethnic, social, cultural, religious and
linguistic groups and nations.
xvi) Education for mercy and tolerance should aim at
countering influences that lead to fear and exclusion of
others, and should help young people to develop capacities
for independent judgement, critical thinking and ethical
reasoning.
xvii) It is time to pledge to really support and implement
programmes of social science research and education for
mercy, tolerance, compassion, human rights and non-violence.
This means devoting special attention to improving teacher
training, curricula, the content of textbooks and lessons,
and other educational materials including new educational
technologies, with a view to educating caring and
responsible citizens open to other cultures, able to
appreciate the value of freedom, respectful of human dignity
and differences, and able to prevent conflicts or resolve
them by non-violent means.
xviii) It is essential that we commit ourselves to promoting
mercy, tolerance as well as non-violence through programmes
and institutions in the fields of education, science,
culture and communication.
xix) In order to generate public awareness, emphasise the
dangers of intolerance and disastrous actions and react with
renewed commitment and action in support of tolerance
promotion and education, pledge to design tailor made
training programmes of short as well as long duration in the
areas of peace, mercy, tolerance, compassion, disaster
education and related subjects.
xx) People should commit themselves to promote tolerance and
non-violence through programmes and institutions by
developing a neological as well as neocratic approach to
governance and by designing a masterplan paradigm for peace
on earth.
World Society, having emerged from the decades of the cold
war, enjoyed for a short time the hopes that the end of this
struggle was the beginning of an era in which the
destructive consequences of that conflict and the deep
divisions imposed by global economic inequities might be
addressed. These hopes were sorely tested, however, by the
eruption of regional conflicts and the hostilities between
people which fragmented nations and drastically changed the
political map of the world as it had been for nearly half a
century. All over the globe, intergroup tensions, religious
hostilities and ethnic conflicts have been erupting. Many
long-standing conflicts previously overlooked have come to
world attention.
Deep hatreds, some of which had previously healed over
through reconciliations that permitted ethnic groups to live
together in peace and cooperation have surfaced in social
behaviour and political movements, and are voiced in the
media and at conferences; communities exploded into warfare.
The process of settling the disputes, reconciling the
hostilities and reconstructing the societies will be one of
the most difficult human society has ever undertaken. It may
be one of the greatest challenges ever faced by those who
seek to educate for peace. Educators should not shrink from
facing the realities of history, nor can they avoid the
responsibility to taking up the challenge posed by the
reconciliation process to those who plan and carry out the
social learning process.
Mercy and Tolerance are but the beginning, the first stage
in a longer, deeper process of developing a culture of
peace. It is the minimal essential quality of social
relations that eschew violence and coercion. Without mercy
and tolerance, peace is not possible. With mercy and
tolerance, a panoply of positive human and social
possibilities can be pursued, including the evolution of a
culture of peace and the convivial communities that comprise
it.
Religion has been a significant factor in the evolution of
cultures, peace and nonviolence providing behavioural and
social codes. Sadly, it has also been the basis of
divisions, intolerance, war and conflict. As we have seen
many man made disasters during last few years, teaching for
religious tolerance has become an urgent necessity. We must
identify a range of strategies and services to help both the
perpetrators of violence and victims.
This will require of religious people repentance and
humility : a recognition that we have hurt one another, we
have misused religion to seek power over others, we have
allowed institutional self-interest to hide the spiritual
heritage entrusted to our care. Too easily we have passed
fine resolutions, but failed to live by them ourselves. In
this gathering it is we ourselves who need to change. This
Global Assembly is a celebration and a thanks giving for all
who have pioneered this work and enthused us with their
dreams; but it is also a time of dedication, when
strengthened by each other's encouragement, we shall commit
ourselves to be used in the building of the new and
spiritual world home, in which all people enjoy a fully
human life.
It is hard to assess the impact that religious people can
have on political processes, especially as politicians
seldom acknowledge those who have influenced them. Modern
communications have given added weight to popular opinion.
Religious leaders may play an important role in forming
public opinion. They can insist on the relevance of
spiritual and moral considerations. They have helped to
maintain public alarm at the enormous stockpile of nuclear
weapons and other means of mass destruction. They have
voiced public outrage at the starvation of millions of
people, as a result of hunger, war, injustice and an unfair
pattern of international trade. They have upheld human
dignity and protested against torture and racism. They have
underpinned efforts to develop internationally agreed
standards of human rights and have helped to monitor their
application.
In all religions there is an increase of extremism, which
also alienates others from any religious allegiance.
Religious differences sometimes enflame political and
economic divisions and sometimes religion is exploited by
the powerful as an instrument of social control.
It is easy to deplore intolerance – especially in others. It
is harder to understand its causes, which may be
psychological or related to a group feeling politically,
culturally or economically marginalised. Intolerance may be
caused by fear or ignorance or it may be based on exclusive
claims to truth.
The educational task is still far from complete.
Increasingly formal and non-formal training, teaching and
research will become more practical with an emphasis on ways
of cooperating to face urgent problems and to seek a global
ethic or consensus on moral values.
We should be trying to show that people of all religions and
races can agree on the importance of peace, mercy,
compassion and tolerance. Only together will prejudice and
discrimination be removed, violence and injustice ended,
poverty relieved and the planet preserved.
In our contemporary world, we are very conscious of the
persistence of injustice, war, hunger and environmental
damage; and we are conscious too of the many ways in which
religions can be use to perpetuate division and
misunderstanding. Why not long for a world where men and
women of faith strive to know and respect one another's
beliefs and ways of life, to work together for the common
good of all, to build up a true world community from our
diverse communities.
World Peace can be restored at the earliest if we propose
the creation of an "Inter-religious Spiritual Forum for
Cooperation with United Nations" with a view to having all
the important religious leaders of different faiths for
discussing and resolving to be compassionate, tolerant,
humanitarian and good to others.
Let us remember what we read in Upnishad – "From the unreal,
lead me to the Real; From darkness, lead me to the Light;
From death, lead me to Immortality".