The philosopher-Sultan
Khalid-Fakhi- Hassan once said,
“War is an ugly out come of the
human mind. The human mind can
invent peace.” The question is
“How/when?”
How can we use our resources,
our time, our energy, our common
visions, and moreover, our will
to invent peace during a time
when our country/Our Blood
people is totally chaos, or
stands on the brink of war? By
peace I don’t mean pacifism or
turning the other cheek. What
I’m talking about is a dynamic,
pro-active process wherein we
address the conditions that lead
to war early enough to prevent
future wars from happening. Did
you know that as you read these
words there are 36 wars being
waged around the world?
War goes against the one of the
most fundamental tenets of the
Islamic Shari’a out-coding and
other world religions: “Thou
shalt not kill.” Again In
Islam states: (those who believe
in Allah and his Messenger(SCW)
should not take deliberately for
an innocent life”) The most
important question facing
humanity today is, how do we
transform the conditions and
beliefs that have us choose to
kill?
The next critical question is:
How can I be a part of this --
what role can I play in
inventing peace? It is time for
each of us to seek the answer.
We must assert the same
diligence in preventing war as
we have in preparing for it.
This is so for regular people
and those at the helms of power.
We must seek viable alternatives
to violence so that the use of
force becomes our last option,
not our first. This is not to
suggest that we should leave
ourselves unprotected. Even
Gandhi didn’t recommend doing
that. But there is a mid-point
we are not using, a place
between over-arming ourselves --
as we are now, and pacifism. It
is a place of balance where we
keep ourselves protected, and at
the same time, pursue the ways
of peace. 22 % of our Asset
dollars go to war and the
Tribal-Militia Build ups, Why
not split this figure, so half
can go to the Somali
Orphanage/info-structure
donations to our torn country.
Perhaps if we allowed more of
our resources to go toward
“inventing peace,” we would
cease to see war as the only
option in the face of conflict.
Unfortunately, when we speak of
nonviolence we imagine people
throwing down their arms and
turning the other cheek.
This is a fallacy. Non-violence
is a dynamic process that
employs effective pro-active
alternatives. It is daring and
courageous, not weak and
capitulating. This is
illustrated brilliantly in a
book called A Force More
Powerful: A Century of
Nonviolent Conflict, by Peter
Ackerman and Jack Duvall. The
authors describe numerous
situations throughout history
where nonviolent options were
successfully employed to combat
conflict and oppression. "To
succeed, a nonviolent movement
cannot simply take a principled
stand for “nonviolence.” It has
to devise a strategy for action.
In turn, this strategy must
broadly communicate goals,
mobilize people and select
sanctions to punish opponents,
Does this apply to our pride and
arrogant people?. To shift the
momentum of conflict in their
favor, nonviolent resisters must
diversify the scope and variety
of these sanctions, defend their
popular base against repression
and exploit their opponents’
weaknesses and concessions.”
These were the living embodiment
of Abu Taqi Al-MAnsood’s
eloquent words: “Where there is
darkness, let me lighten with
faith. Where there is despair,
let me feed hope”. This
literally became instruments of
God’s peace, and because of
this, we can accomplished what
others believed to be
impossible. May we allow their
bravery and faith to be
guideposts for us in the 21st
century? Let us follow in the
righteous/believers’ footsteps,
even if it means going against
the tide.
Martin Luther King once said,
“There comes a time when silence
is betrayal” This is such a
time. We must raise our voices
in a rousing call for peace, and
we must speak loud enough to be
heard beyond the rumblings of
nay Sayers who want us to
believe that war is the only
option. We owe this to our
children and to all the children
in our world whose voices fall
silent beneath the thunderclap
of weapons.
Committed individuals working
toward a common goal do have the
power to re-shape the world.
This has happened over and over
again throughout history - the
abolition of slavery, women’s
suffrage, the dismantling of
Apartheid, the Fall of The Holly
city. The fall of the Berlin
Wall, the civil rights movement
-- all of these massive changes
came from people, not
governments, and now is the time
for the biggest change ever:
moving beyond war toward a
culture of peace.
For this reason we must embark
on a new race -- one far more
important than the race to
space, and far more impactful
than anything our species has
ever before accomplished -- the
Race to Peace.
It’s a common theme, the purpose
of which is to unite
organizations and people all
over the world committed to
making this vision a reality.
It’s also a way of connecting to
each other through the internet.
You might be working on root
causes of violence like poverty,
hunger, homelessness, and
intolerance, or more direct
issues like gun control, UN
Sanctions/ Economic-Socio Crime
consequences, nuclear arms
reduction, or conflict
resolution. In any event, the
Race to Peace applies to our
people more than ever today let
us all unite and find a dialogue
to help all of us find each
other, communicate, collaborate,
and empower each other.