War End Key, ‘DPCW’ Handbook

DPCW Handbook Education Textbook

The Key End the War: DPCW

HWPL is conducting the “Legislate Peace” (LP) project, an initiative to garner support for the DPCW and achieve its adoption at the international level. Starting this year, we have launched new campaigns to bring fresh energy to our society that has grown weary of the pandemic.

One of the campaigns is an online study group on the DPCW Handbook. This handbook explains the 10 articles and 38 clauses of the DPCW in detail. The study aims to teach citizens about the values and spirit of peace embodied in each article and urge them to support the DPCW.

Replay the video7th Anniversary of the September 18th HWPL World Peace Summit
EN: https://bit.ly/918_2021_EN1

Online Study Group on the DPCW Handbook

The handbook was finalized in October 2020 includes content on each article of the DPCW as well as related international issues on why peace is necessary and how it can be achieved.

Below, we will have a Q&A session for DPCW, the key end the war.
Shall we check out what you were curious about the DPCW Handbook?

Q. Why did you introduce the DPCW Handbook as a textbook of education?
I think that the DPCW Handbook enables us to systematically teach international law and the essence of peace to these students and others. And that enables these students to become lecturers in the following course.

Q. Please tell us how you felt while hosting the DPCW Handbook Discussion Project.
It was very interesting to see how these students become lecturers in international [laws] and ambassadors of peace while they talked to others about the DPCW Handbook and how they become ambassadors of peace in the whole world.Heavenly Culture World Peace Restoration of Light

Q. Do you have any plans after the DPCW Handbook Discussion Project?
Obviously, I do have, because, after the instructions in the DPCW Handbook on peace, I want to become a lecturer in DPCW Handbook and inculcate the message of DPCW peace through my students. So I will be a lecturer not only at my home, but I want to reach out to the students elsewhere in other cities and in the region as such.

The DPCW handbook online study sessions have been held in 20 schools in Bangladesh, India, and Tunisia since November 2020. Students analyzed and explored the DPCW through discussions and presentations, while legal experts and professors participated as mentors.

Q. Please feel free to tell us what you felt special about participating in the DPCW Handbook Discussion Project.
Joining the six-month-long DPCW Handbook Discussion Project was a wonderful peace learning experience for me. The whole course was quite special. But one thing that I will always particularly cherish about this course was its particular focus on the importance of peace education. Throughout this Discussion Project, I came to learn about the importance of peace education through the DPCW. And I was persuaded to believe how the importance of peace education can be an effective tool to end the war all over the world.

I joined this course with some brilliant mentors and enthusiastic learners from home and abroad. Throughout this project, I was trained on the importance of peace education by putting the various human rights crisis in context. I believe that the knowledge that I have gained from this course will be great contribution to society and I feel really really great about participating in this course for this reason.

Q. Please tell us what your future plans are.
I am currently a final year law student at the University of Dhaka, Bangladesh, and as I have also graduated from the DPCW course, I aim to join the “Peace Education and Culture Based on the DPCW for Citizens” as a lecturer to spread the importance of peace education among the ordinary people. Because I believe DPCW has the potentiality to end the crisis like the ongoing Rohingya crisis we are facing in Bangladesh or the current human rights crisis in Afghanistan. And that’s why I aim to teach ordinary people about peace education particularly people in Bangladesh, Afghanistan, or various other countries like that all over the world. Thank you. Like Arifur Rahman said, HWPL is planning on expanding its educational program on the DPCW Handbook to include the general public. Peace Culture Education will not only enhance citizens’ understanding of international law but also shed light on steps that they need to take to create a peaceful future.
emerged during the pandemic. The webinars were held on topics such as domestic violence, women’s rights, and religious minorities, and attended by over 2,300 people in 75 countries.Heavenly Culture World Peace Restoration of Light

HWPL is offering a peace platform where governments, local organizations, and citizens can interact and work together to resolve issues that threaten peace in everyday life. We will continue to provide the platform to create a synergy of peace among various sectors and organizations across the globe. In line with implementing the UN Sustainable Development Goal 16, “Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions,” and Goal 17, “Partnerships for the Goals,” in Mali, Africa, HWPL has had discussions with the Malian government officials and civic groups since November 2020. As a result, a peace policy proposal was submitted to the Malian government in September this year.

Heavenly Culture World Peace Restoration of Light

Mr. Sathit Kumarn Quote

HWPL, WARP Peace Office

Heavenly Culture World Peace Restoration of Light
Mr. Sathit Kumarn, Thailand, President of Ramakrishna Vedanta Association of Thailand

“Actually, you know according to the scriptures, religion is only one, and God is only one, but the paths are different. Every individual has a different path. So, we have to put them together.”

Mr. Sathit Kumarn, Thailand, President of Ramakrishna Vedanta Association of Thailand

WARP Offices were established to fulfill the pledge made during the 2014 HWPL World Peace Summit for the alliance of religions. With 265 offices operating in 129 countries, activities of the WARP Offices have been growing despite the pandemic. For seven months since January in 2021, 3,089 scripture comparison discussions were held, which is a 340% hike compared to the previous year. Such active engagement was possible thanks to the endeavors of countless religious leaders.

I fully support what Mr. Sathit Kumarn said.
How about you?

17th World Peace Summit

World Peace Summit Calls for Concerted Action for Sustainable Peace in the New Normal Era

How was the HWPL WARP Summit held by the protagonists of peace, also known as the annual festival of peace, during the coronavirus pandemic?
Was it a break because of the Corona Pandemic?
No.
If you look at the article below, you can see more about this year’s event.
Please click the article link below.

Peace News(World Peace Summit) Source: https://bit.ly/3lP5WvD

Over 30 000 people gathered online on Saturday, 18th September, via Youtube live and Zoom, to commemorate the 7th Anniversary of the HWPL World Peace Summit.
The organiser of the event, Heavenly Culture, World Peace, Restoration of Light (HWPL), has been conducting citizen-centered peacebuilding activities to create “a culture of peace” advocated by the UN and international community to set up an environment of peaceful coexistence since the World Peace Summit in 2014. This year’s event dealt with the progress of international efforts and the plans to promote the peace agenda in the ‘New Normal’ era shifting from the post-Covid to the with-Covid.

This event presented the concerted action for sustainable peace with cases from various sectors such as international law, religion, education, and the media. Also, it addressed international cooperation to overcome the current crisis that threatens the coexistence and harmony of mankind, which has come to the fore during the pandemic.

Heavenly Culture World Peace Restoration of Light
Chairman Man Hee Lee of Heavenly Culture, World Peace, Restoration of Light (HWPL)

“Our objective is to end wars in the global village and establish peace and make it a permanent legacy for future generations. Without peace, everything that we managed to build would be destroyed. … We should not let this happen. So, to achieve peace, shouldn’t we achieve our objective with the same spirit?” said Chairman Man Hee Lee of HWPL at the event.

Peacebuilding efforts led by HWPL to establish legal foundations and international norms for peace through connecting global actors are embodied with its effort to advocate the international law for peace by drafting the Declaration of Peace and Cessation of War (DPCW).

“The DPCW Handbook enables us to systematically teach international law and the essence of peace to these students and others. It enables them to become lecturers in the following course,” said Dr. Mizanur Rahman, Chief Advisor of Asian Association of Law Professors (AALP) as well as Former Chair of National Human Rights Commission, Bangladesh (NHRC-BD), highlighting the need to encourage public discourse on peacebuilding by academia.

In addition to the basic principles of peace assigned to nations to uphold, the DPCW has presented principles that should be dealt with in the present era, such as prohibiting the use of force, fostering religious freedom, and civic participation to spread a culture of peace. In particular, it states that efforts for peace come from all members of the global society by identifying not only nation-states but also international organizations and all citizens as the main actors of building peace. Former President of Ecuador, Dr. Rosalia Arteaga Serrano shared:

We know that it will be hard to achieve peace if we are not all working for it. This is why we need to encourage children, the youth, and adults to prevent verbal abuse and work towards reducing inequalities and eradicating disparities to achieve a more equitable, stable, and peaceful world,”

Hon. Octavia Alfred, Minister of Education, Human Resource Planning, Vocational Training, and National Excellence of Dominica, said that the students learn the necessity of mutual coexistence and cooperation through HWPL peace education and pass on to their friends, parents, and teachers what they have learned. She addressed it also deals with concepts that can develop psychosocial competency skills, such as respect for diversity, order, conflict resolution, and negotiation, so it is being used for teacher’s training.

Heavenly Culture World Peace Restoration of Light
Former High Commissioner of Lesotho to South Africa, Evelyn Letooane

Former High Commissioner of Lesotho to South Africa, Evelyn Letooane speaking at the event.
Former High Commissioner of Lesotho to South Africa, Evelyn Letooane, encouraged women to take up their role in the work of peace, encouraging all women to actively become agents for change.

“While the pandemic chart continues, global war must cease. This is a clarion call to cease all wars and call for peace activities to continue for women and children suffering from war and conflict. Women must immerse themselves into the work for peace rather than letting themselves sit outside of it trying to get work done. Action is the operative word. To this end, women should aim for “working for peace” rather than “protected peace” and peacemaking rather than peacekeeping. It should be emphasized that women are active agents of peace in that process. I am a peace lecturer of IWPG Peace Education having undergone training. My role is to promote peace education, with the spirit of peace, in my country and region.”

Heavenly Culture World Peace Restoration of Light
Swami Vedanand Saraswati, Spiritual Head at the Arya Samaj in Durban, South Africa

Swami Vedanand Saraswati, Spiritual Head at the Arya Samaj in Durban, South Africa, speaking at the event.
Swami Vedanand Saraswati, a faith leader represented Southern Africa WARP Offices in the InterContinenal World Alliance of Religions for Peace panel discussion, saying:

“What we did today, and what HWPL continues to do and has done since its inception, was to selflessly serve through these dialogues. These dialogues help educate and to quash any form of misunderstanding or perception [between religions]. As we get the perceptions cleared, as we dialogue with each other, the heart of the issue lies out there in the community. It is now that we, as faith leaders need to take this out to our congregations so that the fighting stops.”

Heavenly Culture World Peace Restoration of Light
Click replay button above to watch the entire event(HWPL World Peace Summit) of that day(7th Anniversary of the September 18th) again.

Online World Peace Summit

It was really nice when I became an offline HWPL member on September 18 every year and attended the World Peace Summit.
However, this time, the World Peace Summit was held online.
I brought the news that conveys this news in a wonderful way.
Let’s watch it together.

2021, this year’s event dealt with the progress of international efforts and the plans to promote the peace agenda in the ‘New Normal’ era shifting from the post-Covid to the with-Covid.

World Peace Summit Calling for Concerted Action for Sustainable Peace in the New Normal Era

Peace News Source ▲

On September 18th, 2021, the 7th Anniversary of the September 18th HWPL World Peace Summit was held online.

This year’s event dealt with the progress of international efforts and the plans to promote the peace agenda in the ‘New Normal’ era shifting from the post-Covid to the with-Covid.

The organizer of the event, Heavenly Culture, World Peace, Restoration of Light (HWPL), has been conducting citizen-centered peacebuilding activities to create “a culture of peace” advocated by the UN and international community to set up an environment of peaceful coexistence since the World Peace Summit in 2014.

This event presented the concerted action for sustainable peace with cases from various sectors such as international law, religion, education, and the media. Also, it addressed international cooperation to overcome the current crisis that threatens the coexistence and harmony of mankind, which has come to the fore during the pandemic.

Peacebuilding efforts led by HWPL to establish legal foundations and international norms for peace through connecting global actors are embodied with its effort to advocate the international law for peace by drafting the Declaration of Peace and Cessation of War (DPCW).

The DPCW Handbook enables us to systematically teach international law and the essence of peace to these students and others. It enables them to become lecturers in the following course.” said Dr. Mizanur Rahman, Chief Advisor of Asian Association of Law Professors (AALP) as well as Former Chair of National Human Rights Commission, Bangladesh (NHRC-BD), highlighting the need to encourage public discourse on peacebuilding by academia.

In addition to the basic principles of peace assigned to nations to uphold, the DPCW has presented principles that should be dealt with in the present era, such as prohibiting the use of force, fostering religious freedom, and civic participation to spread a culture of peace.

In particular, it states that efforts for peace come from all members of the global society by identifying not only nation-states but also international organizations and all citizens as the main actors of building peace.

We know that it will be hard to achieve peace if we are not all working for it. This is why we need to encourage children, the youth, and adults to prevent verbal abuse and work towards reducing inequalities and eradicating disparities to achieve a more equitable, stable, and peaceful world.” said Former President of Ecuador, Dr. Rosalia Arteaga Serrano.

Hon. Octavia Alfred, Minister of Education, Human Resource Planning, Vocational Training, and National Excellence of Dominica, said that the students learn the necessity of mutual coexistence and cooperation through HWPL peace education and pass it on to their friends, parents, and teachers what they have learned.

She addressed it also deals with concepts that can develop psychosocial competency skills, such as respect for diversity, order, conflict resolution, and negotiation, so it is being used for teacher’s training.

Our objective is to end wars in the global village and establish peace and make it a permanent legacy for future generations. Without peace, everything that we managed to build would be destroyed. … We should not let this happen. So, to achieve peace, shouldn’t we achieve our objective with the same spirit?” said Chairman Man Hee Lee of HWPL at the event.

Heavenly Culture World Peace Restoration of Light

For Sustainable Peace in the New Normal Era

Great news organized in an easy-to-read, at-a-glance
I brought news that contains vivid information about this event.
Let’s take a look.

Source: http://portculture.co.za/2021/09/22/world-peace-summit-calls-for-concerted-action-for-sustainable-peace-in-the-new-normal-era/

HWPL 7th World Peace Summit

World Peace Summit Calls for Concerted Action for Sustainable Peace in the New Normal Era

Over 30 000 people gathered online on Saturday, 18th September, via Youtube live and Zoom, to commemorate the 7th Anniversary of the HWPL World Peace Summit.
The organiser of the event, Heavenly Culture, World Peace, Restoration of Light (HWPL), has been conducting citizen-centered peacebuilding activities to create “a culture of peace” advocated by the UN and international community to set up an environment of peaceful coexistence since the World Peace Summit in 2014. This year’s event dealt with the progress of international efforts and the plans to promote the peace agenda in the ‘New Normal’ era shifting from the post-Covid to the with-Covid.

This event presented the concerted action for sustainable peace with cases from various sectors such as international law, religion, education, and the media. Also, it addressed international cooperation to overcome the current crisis that threatens the coexistence and harmony of mankind, which has come to the fore during the pandemic.

Chairman Man Hee Lee of Heavenly Culture, World Peace, Restoration of Light (HWPL)


“Our objective is to end wars in the global village and establish peace and make it a permanent legacy for future generations. Without peace, everything that we managed to build would be destroyed. …… We should not let this happen. So, to achieve peace, shouldn’t we achieve our objective with the same spirit?” said Chairman Man Hee Lee of HWPL at the event.

Peacebuilding efforts led by HWPL to establish legal foundations and international norms for peace through connecting global actors are embodied with its effort to advocate the international law for peace by drafting the Declaration of Peace and Cessation of War (DPCW).

“The DPCW Handbook enables us to systematically teach international law and the essence of peace to these students and others. It enables them to become lecturers in the following course,” said Dr. Mizanur Rahman, Chief Advisor of Asian Association of Law Professors (AALP) as well as Former Chair of National Human Rights Commission, Bangladesh (NHRC-BD), highlighting the need to encourage public discourse on peacebuilding by academia.

In addition to the basic principles of peace assigned to nations to uphold, the DPCW has presented principles that should be dealt with in the present era, such as prohibiting the use of force, fostering religious freedom, and civic participation to spread a culture of peace. In particular, it states that efforts for peace come from all members of the global society by identifying not only nation-states but also international organizations and all citizens as the main actors of building peace. Former President of Ecuador, Dr. Rosalia Arteaga Serrano shared:

“We know that it will be hard to achieve peace if we are not all working for it. This is why we need to encourage children, the youth, and adults to prevent verbal abuse and work towards reducing inequalities and eradicating disparities to achieve a more equitable, stable, and peaceful world,”

Hon. Octavia Alfred, Minister of Education, Human Resource Planning, Vocational Training, and National Excellence of Dominica, said that the students learn the necessity of mutual coexistence and cooperation through HWPL peace education and pass on to their friends, parents, and teachers what they have learned. She addressed it also deals with concepts that can develop psychosocial competency skills, such as respect for diversity, order, conflict resolution, and negotiation, so it is being used for teacher’s training.

Heavenly Culture World Peace Restoration of Light
Former High Commissioner of Lesotho to South Africa, Evelyn Letooane speaking at the event.

Former High Commissioner of Lesotho to South Africa, Evelyn Letooane, encouraged women to take up their role in the work of peace, encouraging all women to actively become agents for change.

While the pandemic chart continues, global war must cease. This is a clarion call to cease all wars and call for peace activities to continue for women and children suffering from war and conflict. Women must immerse themselves into the work for peace rather than letting themselves sit outside of it trying to get work done. Action is the operative word. To this end, women should aim for “working for peace” rather than “protected peace” and peacemaking rather than peacekeeping. It should be emphasized that women are active agents of peace in that process. I am a peace lecturer of IWPG Peace Education having undergone training. My role is to promote peace education, with the spirit of peace, in my country and region.”

Heavenly Culture World Peace Restoration of Light
Swami Vedanand Saraswati, Spiritual Head at the Arya Samaj in Durban, South Africa, speaking at the event.

Swami Vedanand Saraswati, a faith leader represented Southern Africa WARP Offices in the InterContinenal World Alliance of Religions for Peace panel discussion, saying:

“What we did today, and what HWPL continues to do and has done since its inception, was to selflessly serve through these dialogues. These dialogues help educate and to quash any form of misunderstanding or perception [between religions]. As we get the perceptions cleared, as we dialogue with each other, the heart of the issue lies out there in the community. It is now that we, as faith leaders need to take this out to our congregations so that the fighting stops.”

Sustainable Peace & HWPL Online Summit 7th

It’s a day that reminds me of the spectacular event of HWPL’s peace event held offline.
However, you can watch the video of the 918 online peace event again.
Today, I brought the video and news of the 2021 918 HWPL online peace event.
Please join us online.

HWPL summit calls for concerted action for sustainable peace

Source: https://www.risingbd.com/english/others/news/82412

The seventh anniversary of Heavenly Culture, World Peace, Restoration of Light (HWPL) Summit was held online on September 18, 2021.

This year’s event dealt with the progress of international efforts and the plans to promote the peace agenda in the ‘New Normal’ era shifting from the post-Covid to the with-Covid.

The organizer of the event, Heavenly Culture, World Peace, Restoration of Light (HWPL), has been conducting citizen-centered peacebuilding activities to create “a culture of peace” advocated by the UN and international community to set up an environment of peaceful coexistence since the World Peace Summit in 2014.

This event presented the concerted action for sustainable peace with cases from various sectors such as international law, religion, education, and the media. Also, it addressed international cooperation to overcome the current crisis that threatens the coexistence and harmony of mankind, which has come to the fore during the pandemic.

“The DPCW Handbook enables us to systematically teach international law and the essence of peace to these students and others. It enables them to become lecturers in the following course,” said Mr. Mizanur Rahman, Chief Advisor of Association of Asian Law Professors (AALP) as well as Former Chair of National Human Rights Commission, Bangladesh (NHRC-BD), highlighting the need to encourage public discourse on peacebuilding by academia.

Peacebuilding efforts led by HWPL to establish legal foundations and international norm for peace through connecting global actors are embodied with its effort to advocate the international law for peace by drafting the Declaration of Peace and Cessation of War (DPCW), which designates essential principles including prohibiting the use of force and fostering religious freedom.

In addition to the basic principles of peace assigned to nations to uphold, the DPCW has presented principles that should be dealt with in the present era, such as prohibiting the use of force, fostering religious freedom, and civic participation to spread a culture of peace. In particular, it states that efforts for peace come from all members of the global society by identifying not only nation-states but also international organizations and all citizens as the main actors in building peace.

Heavenly Culture World Peace Restoration of Light

Journalism Peace Workshop

To avoid inciting conflict and anonymity

HWPL Promotes Conflict Sensitive Reporting Through Peace Journalism Workshop

What do you think a journalist should do to avoid fostering conflict and anonymity?
Shall we attend the workshop together?
“Your reporting should always be to de-escalate the conflict…….”

Source: https://www.hwpl.kr/en/news/view/210829543//HWPLPromotesConflictSensitiveReportingThroughPeaceJournalismWorkshop

Heavenly Culture World Peace Restoration of Light

On 14 May 2021, various editors, journalists, and media regulatory bodies gathered for a Peace Journalism Workshop to discuss whether the media are peacemakers or conflict makers. The workshop was hosted by Heavenly Culture, World Peace and Restoration of Light (HWPL) and focused on the African Unions’ Agenda 2020 goal of Silencing the Guns. The event is the first of a series of workshops that promote and nurture a conflict-sensitive approach to reporting in Southern Africa.

The panel included Mr. Robert Maseka from the Namibia Daily News, Cape Argus editor Mr. Aziz Hartley, as well as Mr. John Nakuta from the Editors Forum of Namibia who is also the media ombudsman in Namibia.

According to the Africa Centre for Strategic Studies, there was a 43 percent spike in militant Islamist group violence in Africa in 2020. The 4,958 reported events linked to these groups represents a record level of violence, continuing an upward pattern seen since 2016. There were 7,351 murders committed with firearms – which include pistols, revolvers, high-calibre and homemade guns – between April 2019 and March of this year in South Africa.

Aziz Hartley shared on the issue of glamorizing gun possession and gangs among the youth. “In the Cape Town context, the Cape Flats are among the most violent places on earth. Here a low-key war is underway as gangs engage in turf battles. Many innocent lives are lost during the gang shootings – young children are recruited into gangs as drug runners, hitmen and lookouts.” Mr. Hartley also added that “With the socio-economic challenges of poverty, unemployment accompanied by overcrowding – the youth are sucked into a spiral of gangs, crime and drugs. Crime and gangs have become glamorized in many communities.”

Heavenly Culture World Peace Restoration of Light

As the media ombudsman of the Namibia that has been highly ranked in the Africa Press Freedom Index, John Nakuta gave words of encouragement to the journalists in attendance by saying: “Your reporting should always be to de-escalate the conflict. The words that you speak become the house you live in. The media are not innocent bystanders in conflict, and should thus be careful of the position they take. Are you a peacebuilder or a conflict enabler?” Nakuta also added that reporters should use “accurate and non-judgmental language in reporting, to avoid inciting conflict and anonymity”.

Robert Maseka said, “More workshops should be initiated to enhance the capacity of the African journalists to cover issues of peace promotions on the African continent. Many people have been victims of reckless reporting and misinformation. Through training one can mitigate the risks of the media contributing to violence and conflict.” Mr. Maseka also added that for conflict-sensitive reporting to happen, reporters should get the views of experts in conflict resolution and use those views to try to make the parties in conflict understand that there are ways to resolve their differences.

The Public Relations Division of HWPL has been running peace journalism workshops in African countries, including Namibia, South Africa, Lesotho, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. In 2018, the organization held a Peace Journalism fellowship for 20 broadcast journalists from the SADC region to learn about the value of raising awareness for the need for peace in the continent, and to see how peace journalism not only provides practical solutions for journalists reporting on conflicts, but also aids activists and academics in their analysis of conflict-ridden zones. At the end of the workshop, participants agreed to participate in the forthcoming peace journalism workshops that will be held by HWPL.

The Future of Peace and Security in Africa

What Tigray Portends: The Future of Peace and Security in Africa

The deadly convergence of these two systematic trends — the ineptitude of the African Union and the increasing centrality of Chinese power — points towards a dangerous new era on the continent. While the post-1989 period witnessed a significant decline in the volume, duration, and intensity of African civil wars — due to both the successes of regional and international organizations and the end of the global Cold War — the new international environment threatens to reverse this trend. In this new system, Africa’s most powerful authoritarian governments will likely find themselves unconstrained by the African Union and empowered by Beijing’s emphasis on unlimited “sovereignty.” Escaping from this grim future will require African leaders to stand up to the abuses of the continent’s largest states, and create the kinds of institutions and arrangements that can perpetuate peace and stability or — at the very least — minimize the human suffering caused by war.

HWPL (Heavenly Culture, World Peace, Restoration of Light) is in the stage of completing peace institutions and peace arrangements of peace (DPCW: International Peace Law).
Problems such as various international disputes, wars, and armed forces are resolved.
I hope you read it carefully, hoping for world peace.

Click the link below to see articles on peace efforts related to this.

https://www.hwpl.kr/en/news/view/210829544//2021HWPLWesternAfricaPeaceInitiativePeaceEducatorEmpowermentTraining Heavenly Culture World Peace Restoration of Light

https://www.hwpl.kr/en/news/view/210829545//HWPL%E2%80%99s%E2%80%9CWeAreOneWAO%E2%80%9DProjectSpreadsThroughoutAllRegionsofMali Heavenly Culture World Peace Restoration of Light

https://www.hwpl.kr/en/initiative/lawForPeace (DPCW: Declatation of Peace and Cessation of War)

The Eroding Pathways to Peace

What does the international failure to stop the atrocities in Tigray tell us about Africa’s future trajectory? With the African Union failing its self-proclaimed duty of non-indifference and the United Nations deadlocked, the structural pathways that helped to generate peaceful conclusions to African civil wars over the previous 30 years are eroding.

In a continental order characterized by a weak African Union, rising Chinese influence, and declining American power, African leaders will find ample opportunities to seek to pursue military solutions to sensitive political or ethnic disputes. As the mechanisms and norms for peaceful conflict resolution erode, the region will likely face further instances of democratic backsliding. A recent spate of coups in West Africa — from Mali to Chad to Guinea — illustrates the importance of collective action to confront this trend.

Click on the news below to see more news articles about the subheadings below.

  • Background on a Brutal War
  • The Death of “African Solutions to African Problems”?
  • China, the United Nations, and Tigray
  • The Eroding Pathways to Peace

The G20 Interfaith Forum

Pope to G20 Interfaith Forum and Education in Religion

“true religion consists in adoring God and loving our neighbor. More than putting something on display, we are called to show the fatherly presence of the Heavenly God through our harmony on earth,”

The Pope Francis: The Role of Religions is Essential in Overcoming War and Hatred

I have thought so far that the seed of war begins with the wrong view of religion.

As Pope Francis said in the news article below, religious education is essential to overcome “religious illiteracy.”
The seed of peace is religious education!!!

Peace will surely come if religious education unfolds in this global village where we live. I am sure of this.

And I hope that all of us will be united in love in peace and we encourage you to read the news article below.

love

Source: https://www.vaticannews.va/en/pope/news/2021-09/pope-francis-g20-interfaith-forum-message-peace-religions.html

Pope to G20 Interfaith Forum: Peace is a universal right

Pope Francis sends a message to participants in the G20 Interfaith Forum, and urges religious leaders to pursue peace for all peoples and to serve truth.
By Devin Watkins

The G20 Interfaith Forum runs from 12-14 September in the Italian city of Bologna, and is meant to promote healing from the Covid-19 pandemic and the many conflicts lacerating the world.

Religious leaders taking part in the annual event seek to engage with the agenda of the G20, a forum for international economic cooperation amongst the world’s 20 largest economies.

Pope Francis sent his greetings to participants in the Interfaith Forum on Saturday evening.

True religion

The Pope praised the forum’s goal of sharing ideas and hopes through interfaith dialogue and the promotion of religious freedom.

He said the role of religions is essential in overcoming war and hatred, since “true religion consists in adoring God and loving our neighbor.”

“More than putting something on display, we are called to show the fatherly presence of the Heavenly God through our harmony on earth,” he said.

Misuse of God’s Name

Pope Francis went on to lament that we are, however, far from that achieving that ideal.

He cited figures which indicate that over 3,000 attacks on places of worship have taken place in the past 40 years, killing over 5,000 people.

“It is too easy to see that those who blaspheme God’s holy Name by persecuting their brothers and sisters can still find financing,” he said.

Called to serve truth

However, religious leaders are called to “serve truth” and “declare without hesitation and fear that evil is evil, even and especially when those who commit the acts profess our same creed.”

The Pope then called for education in religion, to overcome “religious illiteracy” which cuts across many societies.

“We must educate,” he said, “promoting equitable and integral development which builds up opportunities for schooling and education, because wherever undisputed poverty and ignorance prevail so too does fundamentalist violence.”

Peace found in justice, not arms

Pope Francis urged peoples of all religions to put aside arms and forgive one another as brothers and sisters.

“The path of peace is not found in arms but in justice,” said the Pope. “And we religious leaders should be the first to support this process, by witnessing to the fact that overcoming evil consists not in proclaiming but in prayer, not in revenge but in harmony, not in the shortcuts offered by strength but in the patient and constructive force of solidarity.”

Fundamental right of peace

Peace, concluded Pope Francis, should be promoted as a fundamental right for all people of the world.

“We should not be neutral,” he said, “but allied on the side of peace!”

The Pope also called for peace to be added as a fourth “P” in the tryptic of “People, Planet, Prosperity”.

“Truly, the time for alliances of some against others has past,” said Pope Francis. “Now is the time for alliances in the search for shared solutions to the problems of all.”