Frank Deaver Peace Editorials
Peace
is Possible
By
Frank Deaver Rotary Club of Tuscaloosa, Alabama USA
Although it passes almost unnoticed in many venues, September 21 was
designated by a 1982 United Nations resolution as "The International
Day of Peace." More than 2000 organizations in nearly 200 nations
have endorsed what many are pushing as a constant effort, not just
an annual one-day recognition.
"Constant" is the key word for Rotarians, and perhaps there is no
better example of that than in The Philippines, where Rotary Clubs
used the September "Day of Peace" to launch their own "Partnership
for Peace." Their immediate goal was to enlist Filipino
Rotarians as peacemakers in Mindanao, the country's southernmost
region. Tensions there have been high for years, with a Muslim
majority seeking greater autonomy, protested by Roman Catholic
politicians and community leaders.
Violence escalated when government negotiations broke down, and the
Red Cross reported that about 100 civilians were killed and more
than half a million people lost their homes and livelihoods,
creating a growing refugee crisis.
What can Rotary do? And what is Rotary doing? Quezon
City Rotarians, led by Don Flordeliza of the Biak-na-bato Rotary
Club, organized 27 area Rotary Clubs in the "Partnership for Peace,"
with its 2006 launching ceremonies also attended by representatives
of various national government agencies. Organized as the
"Fleur-de-lis Centre for Peace, Inc."
http://centre4peace.ph/home.html,
the peace advocates extended their efforts in multiple venues.
Encouraging a new generation opposing
violence, they launched contests among 94 public elementary schools
and 46 public high schools in Quezon City. Similar competition
was extended to schools in Pasay City. The elementary grades
competed in peace paintings, and high school students in essay
writing. The student theme was "Peace in the Hearts and Minds
of Youth."
With a reach into the
embattled Mindanao area, Rotarians in Digos City mounted a local
effort, rallying under the theme "Mindanao Cries for Peace."
Their appeal also was extended to the younger generation with
initiatives at four colleges.
But
peace is far more than the absence of conflict. Peace can only
be achieved if it is in the hearts and minds, the motives and
efforts, of individuals. And this is where Rotary can have its
greatest impact. We must overcome the emphasis on negatives,
those things on which people disagree. We must concentrate on
positives, the universal desires of all people.
Violence erupts when there is controversy over power, dominance,
territorial control. It might be summarized that violence is
ego-driven. But what all people have in common is far more
basic: home and family, education and opportunity, employment and
income, security and peace.
This is
Rotary's opportunity. This is Rotary's challenge. Like
the Rotarians of The Philippines, Rotarians everywhere have the
opportunity to heed the words of a song from many years past:
"Accentuate the positive, eliminate the negative." With that
kind of emphasis on promoting goodwill, "Peace
is Possible!"
|