Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Befriending a potential Afghan insurgent in Quetta Pakistan ; his name was Najib

Please appreciate the insignificant refugee life of 12 year old Pushtoon orphan Najib in Quetta, Pakistan

In short, I learnt form Najib that the world needs to build wide-scale humane relationships across all barriers so as to turn the tide on an increasingly proud and violent regression of humanity.

Najib was a 12 year old Pushtoon refugee orphan who collected rubbish for a living in Quetta, Pakistan. I had just entered the law-less border town of Quetta to work among Afghan refugees and had the privilege of meeting Najib in the streets where he was rummaging through trash.

We became friends.

Our means of communication was just a sense of goodwill, as both of us were rudimentary with Urdu. But we clicked like kindred spirits who wondered if any meaning could be found in war, in safety or in friendship.

I was wondering if I could be of help. How proud that thought turned out to be, especially with the forgotten destitute like Najib. He was the soul who helped me understand what humanitarian workers need to live out, that we can only begin to be of some transient help when we understand the practice of love.

Love is freed through friendship that’s oblivious to race, class and religion.

Love is impossible in war because war destroys and kills.

Love sees that we have the same ‘dirt’ in our lives and that we need to somehow recover together from our frailties.

I’ve no idea if Najib is still alive today. Or if he has not become the hunted and ‘demonized’ Afghan insurgent.

Quetta is now touted as the headquarters of the Afghan Taliban under Mullah Omar and there are rumours of plans to bomb it, perhaps with the cold symbol of military pride, the drones.

There were certainly many ‘madrassahs’ ( religious schools ) training young boys in ‘jihad’ while I was there in 2002 through to 2004, probably a peak period of the re-grouping of Afghan fighters following the bombing of Afghanistan post September 11.

I shudder to think how different things may have been for me if I were not a civilian humanitarian worker but a uniformed soldier, however well-intentioned a soldier I may have been. I would never have become Najib’s friend.

We should all shudder to think that the hearts of the world’s religious, intellectual and political elite of today unquestioningly accept militarism as a response to hate, anger and a vacuum of meaningful relationships.

We should shudder at its sheer amoral-ness, emptiness and senseless-ness.

For a few months, Najib visited me frequently, sharing food with me, looking to me for healing when he pricked his finger with a used syringe needle he had collected in his trash sack and enjoying a Coke treat on a warm summer day.

I will never know if he appreciated our interaction, but I can declare that I did.

In season, I invited Najib and his aged grandma ( both his parents had been killed in the war  ) to share some delicious Pakistani mangoes. I was overjoyed to wash Najib’s soiled hands and feet before the ‘meal’. When I asked to take a photo with Najib and his grandma, I asked Najib to smile.

Najib’s grandma chided me in Kandahri Pushto, “Why are you asking Najib to smile? He doesn’t have any reason to smile.”

Then ,on a dreary late afternoon, Najib informed me with teary eyes that he was leaving to cross borders again, this time into Iran, because ‘life in Quetta was difficult.’
How I wish I could meet Najib again.                  

Najib was illiterate. One day, I had taught him to write his name in my journal and had recorded my thoughts in the verses below.

نجیب

On this quiet page

On this quiet page
I taught him to write his name
His life, just like this safha  صفحه
Will turn the corner and move on again

Not seeing how the end will B بor be
Nor how to start with the N  نor end
But scribbling with fortitude and persistence
a wandering spirit and a weary hand

Trying to chance upon some line
That will spell real hope from above
And form a meaning kind and true
And have roots in unfading love

My deep concern for this orphan boy
Whose name and friendship I chanced upon
Who gave me a privileged moment
When on this page his name was formed

The quiet voice and silent name of Najib       نجیب


Video Script

Quetta at the Afghan Pakistan border

The Af-Pak border is now labeled an ‘epicenter of terrorism’

We should remember that refugee settlements house human beings

Afghan wars mean Afghan refugees

In 2002, I met Afghan refugee children collecting trash in the Quetta alleys

12-year-old Pushtoon orphan Najib lost his parents & fled Kandahar

Najib had eyes of life and grief

He collected trash to re-sell for a few rupees

No trash was too ‘lowly’ for him

He’s one among the destitute, unknown masses
                                                  
Unknowingly, Najib turned my life upside down…

…when he offered me his hand of friendship

…and shared his journey with me

We had Coca Cola together

Ate apples together

Yes, even mused over technology together

One day, Najib’s hand was hurt by a syringe needle he had collected

He came running bare-feet, to ‘un-burden’ his pain with me

Another day, I cleaned Najib’s soiled hands for a meal
                                            
His grandma said that Najib had no reason to smile

But you know, Najib had a smile…

He smiled when he was with friends

Like many impoverished Afghans, Najib lived in a silence

Like many impoverished Afghans, he expected little of life

We can make peace with potential insurgents by befriending them

Love is impossible in war as war destroys & kills.

Love is freed thru friendship that’s oblivious to race, class & religion

Love sees that we have the same ‘dirt’ in our lives

that we need to somehow recover together from our frailties.

Love is how we will ask for peace

Afghan youth release ‘doves’ in support of World March for Peace

Please watch Afghan youth release 2 white pigeons ( representing doves ) for World March for Peace

Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers showed their support for The World March for Peace & Non-violence http://www.theworldmarch.org/index.php

They paid a visit to the UN, part of whose charter is ‘to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war’.

As this country is built into a verdant meadow, oh why don’t the intellectuals care about peace?

Peace is priceless.

Without peace, it’s impossible to survive.

Peace is love and friendship.

We the youth of Afghanistan want peace & a culture of non-violence for Afg & the world

We are participating in The World March for Peace and Non-violence

Why have Afghans, like others in the world, chosen the dove as a symbol of peace?

The dove is meek.
It represents peace.

The dove has a special white.
It carries love.
It is a bird of freedom.

The dove is friendship.
The dove is very loving.

محبت آن طریق است که کبوتر پرواز می شود
Love is how the dove will fly!

Peace…peace!

Silent Night by Simon and Garfunkel

Love is how the dove will fly!
                               

Background words from the music of Silent Night by Simon and Garfunkel

“…into anti-Vietnam war protests…demonstrators were forcibly evicted from the areas where they began chanting anti-war slogans.
Former Vice-President Richard Nixon says that unless there is a substantial increase in the present war effort in Vietnam, the US should look forward to 5 more years of war.
In a speech before the Convention of The Veterans of Foreign Wars in New York , Nixon also said that opposition to the war in this country is the greatest single weapon working against the US. That’s the seven o’clock edition of the news. Good night. “

Sunday, December 13, 2009

Afghan youth face a Nobel peace of war

Please watch how Afghan youth are facing a Nobel peace of war


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=leSBFQ95qio



We ordinary people need to stop this madness






When the world shouts the merits of war, we will respectfully refuse its noise.






Rather than giving peace an uncertain prize, let's give peace a certain chance.






Thank you for hearing our voice of peace, as being heard is a breakthrough for silence!



We thank all our friends for being with us as we kept the 2nd Cup of Tea Vigil at Bamiyan Peace Park ( daily from 12pm to 1pm ) from the 15th of November 2009 to the 10th of December 2009. Together with our friends, we will henceforth continue as a weekly vigil.



We thank the growing number of friends in this heart-storm of love who have touched us in Afghanistan, deeply.



We thank each and every one of our fans at Youth Peace Volunteers Facebook and others who have sent us encouraging emails of support from the USA, Canada, Brazil, Singapore, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, UK, Ireland, Switzerland, Germany, Australia, Egypt and South Africa.



In particular, through the course of our 2nd Cup of Tea Vigil, Douglas Mackey, Jody Tiller, Mark Johnson and their friends in the States ( Matt Grant & students and staff of Olympia High School, Evergreen State College, MidEast Solidarity Project ) had spoken to us on numerous, almost daily occasions through the cell phone long-distance. We also thank Josh Steiber, Tibor Brewer, June Holliday, Dana Lyons, Terry Greene and Andrea LeBlanc of Peaceful Tomorrows, Betsy and her students from Pages for Peace MA, Boston.



It was like hearing Peace and Love being spoken to our hearts from across the oceans.



President Obama may not have heard us yet but our voice of peace in the midst of an escalating war will remain true to our conscience.



The mountains may be un-moved, but the sound of peace from within our hearts will move among the valleys in resounding and resolute waves.





Transcript of video



To friends in the world, be at peace!



Today, our understanding of peace seems to have hit an ice wall



2 Afghan boys had a bumpy truck ride on Afghanistan’s mountain road



The struggle for peace in Afghanistan is not easy



But without peace, it’s impossible for us to live



A young boy had just taken over the wheels to learn how to drive



Drive quickly before it gets dark & the wolves come out to get us…



Are wolves dangerous? Yes.

Do they ‘eat’ humans? Ya…

Don’t they just eat small birds? No 



We should pause and be still in this madness of war



We should pause in recognizing that we have sacred but temporal lives.



We should keep our dignity even in our dying.



We ordinary people need to stop this madness.



Why are we killing one another?



Killing only makes hate correct. It takes away our friends & the good things in life.



When the world shouts the merits of war, we will respectfully refuse its noise.



Rather than giving peace an uncertain prize, let's give peace a certain chance.



Enough of words without actions

True peace is needed

Love is how we’ll ask for peace



The Afghan peace volunteers

‘Their flesh is my flesh, their blood is my blood, their pain is my pain, their SMILE is my SMILE.’ Henri Nouwen



International peace volunteers in Olympia USA & across the globe. ‘Do not wait for leaders; do it alone, person to person.’ Mother Teresa



Abdulai gives the U.S. Ambassador a photo gift.‘Mountains cannot reach mountains,only Man can reach Man.’ Afghan proverb



The Afghan peace vigil group with the U.S. Ambassador and his wife

‘I would teach peace rather than war, love rather than hate.’ Albert Einstein





We have hope that love has a value which overcomes even death.



We know that we’re not alone. We’re waiting historically with the rest of the world.



With love, we ask the Nobel Peace Laureate President Obama for the Reconciliation of Civil Hearts.



Thank you for hearing our voice of peace, as being heard is a breakthrough for silence.

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Peace must arise from the ordinary ; love can change the strategies of war & peace

Please hear 13 year old Abdul Ali sing and speak of war and peace


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=38RBMMFyBR0



From the hills I play my flute…


I wish for peace & reconciliation


When will the world ever understand?






We thank those who pray that we'll have peace


But prayers won’t suffice if one by one, war takes us away from life






Peace for the ordinary billions must be loved into passionate existence


by a billion ordinary hearts



From Afghanistan, we thank every individual who is now journeying with us in this heart-storm of love, befriending us at

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Youth-Peace-Volunteers/206186386153?v=wall or youthpeacevolunteers@gmail.com or

journeytosmile@gmail.com



Thank you, our friends, brothers and sisters!



Love and peace,

Hakim in Afghanistan

http://ourjourneytosmile.com/blog





Text of video



Is your wish for peace a special or ordinary wish?

Our wish for peace is ordinary because everyone wishes for peace



Who is responsible for bringing peace?

We ourselves are responsible for bringing peace.



If war breaks out, whose fault is it?

It is our fault because we ourselves should make peace.



If governments wage war, we should also temper that.

We the people should temper governments? How?

Yes, that we make peace, as war is futile.



Should we wait for elders & leaders to bring peace?

No, we shouldn’t wait…we ordinary people should arise from our own places to bring peace.



An Afghan leader had said that he wanted to turn Afg into a river of blood

We the people of Afghanistan want a river of peace



We ordinary people should take the course of peace

We should arise from our homes, from the mountains & from the cities



Can’t we ordinary people arise & move?

We can and we will arise for peace.



Peace, peace…from the bottom of our hearts, peace!



From the hills I play my flute…

I wish for peace & reconciliation

When will the world ever understand?



We thank those who pray that we'll have peace

But prayers won’t suffice if one by one, war takes us away from life.



Peace for the ordinary billions must be loved into passionate existence by a billion ordinary hearts



Even when the cold sets in and ice forms over the rivers,

we ordinary people should arise from our own places to bring peace

arise from our homes, from the mountains & from the cities



For if war breaks out, whose fault is it?

Peace, peace…from the bottom of our hearts, peace!



Love is how we’ll ask for peace, love that must arise from the ordinary



I wish for peace & reconciliation

When will the world ever understand?

Friday, December 4, 2009

Love is how we’ll need to run ; finding indomitable love in Afghan disappointment

Please listen to Abdulai’s disappointment and love “I was very young during the Taliban war. I fled to the Baba Mountains with my family..”


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5RCzd68KN9I



I was very young during the Taliban war. I fled to the Baba Mountains with my family.There was lots of snow then. When I returned…I never saw my father again.



We shouldn’t continue this manner of life. This life is hard & difficult.



We should have a good & better life through peace & reconciliation.



A resolute love can change every human being & every violent person.



Dear friends in Afghanistan & the world, we may not make it…



But as Ghandi encouraged, ‘ Be the change you want to see in the world.’



More troops & more war make life tough for us.



But we will still move towards love & truth.



Let we ourselves, the youth, bring change. Yes..yes..yes!



Love is how we’ll ask for peace! Let’s move…let’s go!



When disappointment closes in like another moon-less night


We pause in our madness as mere dying Men


From this grief we salvage an indomitable love


That turns even tears into rivers of light


That breaks out in a run, however weary our sight



We will still move towards love & truth



With love, we ask the Nobel Peace Laureate President Obama for a Reconciliation of Civil Hearts

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Peace to Obama’s daughters from Afghan children ; 10-15 year old Afghan boys & girls greet Malia & ‎Sasha

Dear friends of peace,




Please watch 10-15 year old Afghan boys & girls speak words of peace & love to Obama’s daughters Malia & Shasha in : Peace to Obama’s daughters from Afghan children

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ejlusJ38UKU



Video Excerpt



Malia and Shasha, peace from Afghanistan!



I am Parwin ( 13 years old ), Rana ( 10 ), Abdul Ali ( 13 ), Zekerullah ( 13 ), Abdulai ( 13 ) and Raziq ( 15 ).



No one wins in war, neither women nor men.



We are humans & we want peace.



There are many other creative, non-violent solutions & they need a chance



Love is how we’ll ask for peace!



Malia & Shasha & your parents, from Afg, be at peace!



Malia & Shasha, God protect you & God will take care of you!





Standing together in stirring a heart-storm of love,

meekly & resolutely.



Love is how we’ll ask for peace!

Let love refrain from silence.



We will have to repent in this generation not merely for the hateful words and actions of the bad people but for the appalling silence of the good people.

Martin Luther King



The human voice can never reach the distance that is covered by the still small voice of conscience.

Where love is, there God is also.

Mohandas Gandhi



Love,

Hakim in Afghanistan

On behalf of Abdulai, Zekerullah, Abdul Ali, Raziq, Lala, Faiz, Mohd Jan, Mohd Hussein and Nazuko, Parwin, Rana…..

http://ourjourneytosmile.com/blog

Saturday, November 28, 2009

American Thanksgiving and our Afghan winter ; Afghan vigilers’ telephone conversation with Amy Goodman

To our American friends, have a meaningful and warm Thanksgiving!




We especially thank Douglas Mackey and Dennis Mills for the tele-conversation we had with students of Olympia High School and Evergreen State College, as well as Amy Goodman for speaking to us in our Afghan silence.



Please watch the Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers’ 2 a.m. conversation with Amy Goodman, & speak of

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2uXtO0e0_KE



In this season of decisions over Afghanistan, the cold has set in.



“I was sick last week. I had fever & was shivering. I kept warm while I slept at home. Now I’m well & warm at heart. I think that friendship is warmth. Home is warmth!

But war is cold & war freezes friendship. “ Abdul Raziq



Video excerpt of Amy Goodman's 2.30 a.m. conversation with the vigilers on 25/11/2009


Hello! Salam to you Amy!






I want to ask you why you’re doing what you’re doing?


شما چرا این کارصلح را انجام می دهید؟






We want to raise the voice of peace in Afg & the world. We’re hoping for Obama’s answer to our peace message






Blood cannot wash away blood ( an Afghan Proverb ).


Hate cannot wash away hate.


War cannot wash away war.






خدا حافظ !


God protect you, Amy!



Winter & the cold have arrived in Afghanistan.



Some places, the water at the spring freezes & the roads get cut off.



We have to collect precious fuel to keep warm.



We can bear these physical challenges better than lies, war, violence & pride which make our souls shake with their cold indifference, their isolation & their separation.



We sometimes wonder what we should expect from life, from history & from humanity. Perhaps we shouldn’t expect much because unrealistic expectations may silence our hopes.



We comfort one another in saying, “It doesn’t matter. God is kind.” You may think that we should be able to do better than to just have comforting words



Even if we don’t live through this winter, love would endure, love would last.



Is war the sole answer to the problems of Afghanistan?

Can’t life offer us more creative & noble alternatives?



Yes, love would survive another winter.



Yes, love is how we’ll ask for peace!



"The way of peace is the way of love. Love is the greatest power on earth. It conquers all things." Peace Pilgrim



Peace stands together in love, giving thanks for warmth in the cold Afghan winter





Excerpt of Obama’s Thanksgiving speech 26/11/2009


But this Thanksgiving also takes place at a time of great trial for our people.


Across the country, there were empty seats at the table, as brave Americans continue to serve in harm's way from the mountains of Afghanistan to the deserts of Iraq. We honor and give thanks for their sacrifice, and stand by the families who endure their absence with such dignity and resolve.


I have seen this strength firsthand over many months…. in young Americans enlisting in a time of war..


It is a testament to our national character… that we want that American Dream not just for ourselves, but for each other.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Afghan lady & girl’s loving greetings of peace to U.S. Ambassador Eikenberry ; a heart-storm is slowly seeding




Please watch an Afghan lady & girl stand with peace youth volunteers in greetings to the U.S. Ambassador Eikenberry, who urged for no troop surge.



Zekerullah, “Eikenberry Sir & your wife, do you have time to be with us at the Bamiyan Peace Park?”

Nazuko : “We wish for peace. Love is how we’ll ask for peace.”

This seems a time when we keep asking each other what is enough, what numbers, what measures…

Against the grain, even the decay within ourselves, we stand with friends in the quiet resolution that love is enough, yes, love is enough.

Others may take everything away from us, but they cannot take away love.

Love is how we’ll ask for peace

2nd Cup of Tea Peace Vigil, our second mile of love
Come stand with us for love!




The heart-storm of love is slowly seeding. We thank the individuals from the groups below who inspire us to plod on in Afghanistan!

  1. Olympia Washington Vigil

Photos :



  1. Evergreen State College Vigil, Olympia Washington

Photos :



  1. Mideast Solidarity Project, Evergreen State College, Olympia Washington

  1. Sheridan Peacemakers, Wyoming USA

  1. Stand Up for Peace, Laramie USA

  1. Contagious Love Experiment

We also thank Douglas Mackey, Dennis Mills and staff of Olympia High School for making possible a long-distance tele-conference with the Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers on the 24th of November 2009.




Thursday, November 19, 2009

The love in Zekerullah’s journey to peace ; restoring the truth



Please watch 13 year old Zekerullah explain why ‘there’s no justice or truth in Afg today’


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FgCXy60yy2U



Zekerullah, a 13 year Afghan youth peace volunteer who is taking part in the peace vigils at Bamiyan Peace Park, is learning to walk that 2nd mile for love.



Love speaks the truth with gentleness, calling corruption corruption, not a budding democracy.



Love will not nurture greed in Afghan robes or international suits.



Love walks 2 hours in the mud to earn a decent penny though it is aware that, by economic design, money and power are not with those who walk.



Love deliberately asks ‘Does Zekerullah deserve a decent livelihood as much as I do?’



Love waits eagerly for peace and justice, even if, by ‘fateful neglect’, it is un-noticed and un-rewarded.



Love knows that killing in whatever name, even in the name of ‘Overseas Contingency Operations’, is killing. Killing removes life and love; we are not able to justify to Zekerullah that killing is a civil response for our ‘contingencies’.



Love recognizes that war is not peace, whatever its prize.



Love empathizes with soldiers and victims who suffer post-traumatic stress, knowing that it is an ORDER of human conscience that can guide Mankind to wholeness, pleading ‘Enough. Please stop!’



Please speak the truth in love together with Zekerullah, not later but now.


Say it as it is.






This may be a chance for Afghan youth to raise the possibility of love,


for Man to do a little something for other Men,


by standing and waiting firmly for peace before the giants that be.



Killing goes against everything we're taught from childhood about love and compassion. It goes against every religious doctrine and moral code. It's small wonder that so many come back from war "sick at heart."


Irish Nobel peace laureate Mairead Maguire





Text of video

Zekerullah, 13 years old, stopped Grade 6 school last year






Good morning! Good morning, teacher!


Is it winter already? Yes, it’s become really cold.






Did it snow? Yes, the snow melted & so it’s very muddy.






How do you come (to the city from his village)?


I walk here. Sometimes I hitch a ride on the buttock (back) of a truck.






When you walk, how long does it take? Did you ask how long it takes? 2 hours.






2 hours? Are your legs strong? My legs….yes, they’re strong. Show me your strong legs.






Zekerullah works at a bakery in the city, making biscuits & cakes






How can Afghanistan become peaceful?


We need to act in truth.


We should not lie or cheat. Then, Afg can become peaceful.






Does justice and truth exist in Afghanistan today? No. Why?






If you have a legal case handled by the government authorities & you don’t pay a bribe, they won’t sign the documents






If you fail the exams in school or in college, but you have connections in the government or if you pay a bribe, you’ll pass






Also with the police, if you give some money, your matter will be settled.






You promised the U.S. Ambassador & indirectly President Obama that you would return to school next spring. Would you fulfill your promise?






If bad days do not come my way, Ill definitely fulfill my promise.If bad days come,no one would be able to.






What do you wish from President Obama? That he answers our message of peace.


Tuesday, November 17, 2009

2nd Cup of Tea Peace Vigil begins our 2nd mile for love

Please watch the growing smiles of friendship over tea!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E-4ZMh8Z9ts


‘Do not wait for leaders; do it alone, person ‎to person.’ Mother Teresa

Come and have the 2nd cup of tea and deepen our friendships of peace.

Friends, join us wherever you are!
With love,
from the Afghan & International Youth Peace Volunteers

Dandelion Salad and Peace Works
We thank our peacemaker friends in PeaceWorks, Columbia Missouri USA, for giving us their support. We were encouraged by all your smiles!

Thanks to Dandelion Salad, below is the link to the photos of the smiling faces from Columbia, MO when the Peaceworks organization gathered for their annual dinner

‘Love is How We’ll Ask for Peace’ (Set)
http://www.flickr.com/photos/lorri37/sets/72157622681524727/

Oregon Fellowship of Reconciliation
We also thank Oregon Fellowship of Reconciliation for writing to us on You Tube, saying :

The Oregon Fellowship of Reconciliation endorses your efforts! Let love bring peace! A photo will follow!

Our growing peace vigil friendships
Thank you all for encouraging us. Please send us your vigil information and pictures, wherever you are standing for peace, to youthpeacevolunteers@gmail.com

2nd Cup of Tea Peace Vigil, our 2nd mile for love

Though we may be discouraged by the loud words, the self-interest, the disunity and the sinking sense of futility, we can share a cup of tea as we keep a vigil for peace.

Though we may be surrounded by neglect, anger, pride and the meaningless mire of violence, we can find mutual comfort in transforming our struggle for love.

Mohd Hussein and 8 other Afghan peace youth volunteers will begin their 2nd Cup of Tea Peace Vigil on Sunday, the 15th of November 2009, daily from 12 noon to 1 pm Bamiyan time, at the Bamiyan Peace Park.

Please watch Mohd Hussein invite us for Afghan tea!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rF0msK8dlh4

We’ll have our 2nd cups of tea, in deepening our friendships and strengthening our love.

We wish for you to join us in our 2nd Cup of Tea Peace Vigil,
person by hopeful person, friends with new friends
in homes, in parks, along the streets
and in the warm places of your hearts!

بار اول دوست , بار دوم برادر!
The first time, we’re friends. The second time, brothers.
Afghan proverb

2nd Cup of Tea Peace Vigil, our 2nd mile for love

Though we may be discouraged by the loud words, the self-interest, the disunity and the sinking sense of futility, we can share a cup of tea as we keep a vigil for peace.






Though we may be surrounded by neglect, anger, pride and the meaningless mire of violence, we can find mutual comfort in transforming our struggle for love.

 

The love in Abdulai’s journey to peace

Abdulai, who is leading the Afghan peace vigilers, speaks of human dignity in this video


The love in Abdulai’s journey to peace








http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sttdyu38CWw


I’ve discovered the quiet dignity of young Afghan children working to help make ends meet.




Whereas abusive child labor should be addressed, I’ve not personally found specific instances of such abuse here.



Rather, in Abdulai’s and the Afghan person’s common poverty, I’ve witnessed their patience with the ‘fairness’ of un-chosen fates while reflecting on the privilege of ‘first world’ comforts that sometimes spoil ‘first world’ children.



Yes, daily life and work for kids in Afghanistan is generally tough but we know that dignity isn’t just economic. The rich child becomes ‘ugly’ when he is violent in his anger. The poor child carries dignity when he stays meek even when angry.



I can see that quality in Abdulai and therefore am privileged to walk with him in the love with which he asks for peace.

Text of video


13 year old Abdulai in his small shop,

a student, farmer & shopkeeper whose

father & grandfather were killed in war

The love in his journey to peace...



Need we suggest at all, that instead of spending millions on war, you can build factories to give us work & a future?



What do you wish for in your life?



‎I wish for…truth and love.



Do you think you can find love and truth in your life?‎



I don’t know.‎



Elisa, Abdulai’s pen pal : I am 14 years old from the United States & on our news channels they never show any of Afghanistan's children speaking.



This is the first time I’ve heard voices of Afghan people & seen the beauty of Afghanistan.



Please keep smiling & never give up your hope, because all youth are the future of the world Elisa



Have you been encouraged as a pen pal of Elisa? Yes!



Why? I’ve found a friend.



Now that you’re a friend of Elisa & international peace volunteers, would you hurt them? No.



If unfortunately, war begins &‎ you meet these friends in war, would you incidentally......kill them?



No. We should surely understand human dignity.



What’s that in your hand?



This is Obama with his family.



What do you wish from President Barack Obama, the Nobel Peace Laureate?



My friends & I are waiting for his answer to our peace message.



Abdulai carrying his load of collected wood home for winter fuel, in his journey to dignity & peace

Friday, November 13, 2009

The Love in humanity’s journey to peace ; our shared gratitude‎


“The ‘warrior’ knows that the most important words in all languages are the small words :

yes, love, God

They are words which are easy enough to say and which fill vast empty spaces.”

Paul Coelho

Please watch Western Washington Fellowship of Reconciliation’s Love in saying thanks

Text of video
سلام! …… Salam! ( Peace! )

تشکر! ...... Tashakur! ( Thank you! )

These friends from Western Washington Fellowship of Reconciliation have encouraged us with their love is saying ‘thank you’, in the Dari language of Afghan hearts.


We thank all our friends who have registered their support with a Yes! to us.

We thank them with a gratitude that is adding meaning to our ordinary lives.

1. We thank the following who have written to us at youthpeacevolunteers@gmail.com with their Yes!

Priscilla Singapore
June USA
Kyle Kristensen USA
Susan Asheville NC, USA
Lynette Shek Singapore
Carol and Jane Alexander Oregon USA ( see Corvallis Alternatives to War’s 8 year vigil below ! )
Randel Mowen USA

We also thank the Fans who have indicated their support through the Youth Peace Volunteers Facebook at


2. We have these 45 fans below as of 12/11/2009 2.15 pm Afghanistan Time. Thanks to each and every one of you!

Catherine Dawdy
Donna Schumann
Bernard Bernie Meyer
Linda Mackaman Young
Susan Bruce
Bert Jones
Jennifer Newell
Nayantra Nanda Kumar
Lisa Aceste DiMartino
Karen Griswold
Keith David Halloran
Raamesh Gowri Raghavan
Mridula Koshy
Michael Creighton
Peggy Love
John VanDyke Wilmerdong Jr.
Leanne Whittle
Chris Collier
Janice Matthews
Somer Loen
Ray A.Estrada Jr.
Sueli F. Lima
Anita Stewart
Dan Ryan
Lynette Shek
Dennis DeAsis
Asher Platts
Vin Gopal
Maya Kocian
Kayla Matthies Saville
Susan Marie Oehler
Jody Tiller Mackey
Kyle Kristensen
Cheryl Anne Crist
Larry Kerschner
Dennis W. Mills
Lo Daniels
Douglas Mackey
ForPeace With Love

3. We also thank others who have contacted us personally.

Willie Wee and wife Singapore


Corvallis Alternatives to War’s 8 year vigil ( Carol and Jane Alexander are from this group)

Carol Alexander wrote to us saying :

Dear friends in peace,
We have forwarded on your moving message to many others. We are with you in spirit and in peace. Please see the Al Jazeera story about our daily vigil: http://english.aljazeera.net:80/news/americas/2009/11/20091110191657129146.html ( below )

Peace and love to you.
Carol Alexander, Corvallis, Oregon, USA

Al Jazeera Article
The future of American troops in Afghanistan is again in the headlines in the US amid reports that Barack Obama, the president, has made up his mind about future troop levels there.
Despite speculation in US media, the White House is strongly denying that Obama has decided to send as many as 40,000 more troops to Afghanistan.
As Washington considers its next move in Afghanistan, protesters in a small US town are continuing an anti-war vigil they began eight years ago.
Sebastian Walker reports on the demonstration against the war in Afghanistan from the western US state of Oregon.
Watch the Corvallis Alternatives to War’s 8 year vigil
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=48xOVPa2RME

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Afghan & international youth peace volunteers say with the world “Love is How We'll Ask for Peace.”






Our immediate goal

With love, we request the 2009 Nobel Peace Laureate, President Obama, to answer the Afghan youth ‎peace message ‘Reconciliation of Civil Hearts’, as part of his wider message of peace to the peaceful ‎future of our shared world, on or about the 10th of December, the day he will receive the Nobel Peace ‎Prize in Oslo, Norway.‎

Please watch our Afghan peace youth vigilers appeal to the world in the video above or at :‎
Love is how we’ll ask for peace
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lLKR6iEdZGs

Our larger goal is to encourage Afghanistan and the world towards concrete love and peace, through wide scale ‎reconciliatory and humane relations. ‎


How we’ll work towards our immediate goal in the next one month , ‎
before the 10th of December 2009‎

The road had opened before us when the U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan, Karl Eikenberry, kindly visited our ‎Afghan peace vigil group at the Bamiyan Peace Park in Afghanistan on the 28th of October 2009. During the ‎visit, he promised the Afghan peace youth vigilers that he would get a response from President Obama, to their ‎message of peace “Reconciliation of Civil Hearts” ‎

Internationally, in the next one month before President Obama receives his Nobel Peace Prize in Norway, we ‎will garner the heart-to-heart support of Afghan and international youth peace volunteer supporters by collecting ‎the signatures of supporters with pictures of their individual smiling faces. ‎

We will put them all into growing landscape-style pictures / motages. To rally a heart-storm of love in this ‎effort, we’ll encourage all supporters to blog at the blog-site http://youthpeacevolunteers.blogspot.com/, entitled ‎‎“Afghan & international youth peace volunteers say together, ‘Love is How We'll Ask for Peace.’ ‎

In Afghanistan, we hope to hold a Afghan national youth peace convention in Bamiyan in the month of ‎November.‎

All updates can also be found at http://ourjourneytosmile.com/blog


Our current partners

Our Journey to Smile ( the 10 Afghan peace vigil youth are part of this peace-building group in Afghanistan, ‎with international volunteers from Singapore )‎
http://ourjourneytosmile.com/blog
Contact person : Hakim at journeytosmile@gmail.com

ContagiousLoveExperiment (2 Iraq veterans’ Josh Steiber and Conor Curran who are actively promoting ‎peace)‎
http://contagiousloveexperiment.wordpress.com/‎
Contact person : Josh at desertcamel87@yahoo.com

Olympia WA Fellowship of Reconciliation USA and Iraq Memorial to Life ( who had up to 100 persons who ‎kept the vigil with the Afghan youth peace volunteers concurrently in Olympia, USA )‎
http://www.olyfor.org/
http://www.iraqmemorialtolife.org/
Contact person : Douglas Mackey at douglas.mackey@youthpeacevolunteers.org

This is the group we have now and with this small number of supporters we ask for your support – because it ‎will take more of us to deliver the message to enough people so that it makes a difference.‎
‎ ‎
We know our support will grow as we reach our list of individual personal contacts with international ‎peacemakers and peace groups.‎


How to support each other immediately

Any individual, young or old, who wishes to stand with the Afghan and international peace volunteers, in ‎support of their peace request to President Obama, can ‎

‎1.‎ Sign in as a Fan of Youth Peace Volunteers on Facebook ( click below )‎

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Youth-Peace-Volunteers/206186386153?v=wall

By becoming a Fan, you are indicating your support for the Afghan youth peace volunteers’ appeal to ‎President Obama

‎2.‎ Send a quick email to youthpeacevolunteers@gmail.com

Simply indicate: Yes to Youth Peace Volunteers!‎

Provide your name and nationality and if you are willing to have your smiling face put together in a collage ‎picture, send us your picture too!‎

We will begin to compile these hearts of love, peace and reconciliation into landscape and collage-style pictures ‎and watch humanity’s love grow!‎

Given the global picture of war and peace today, we believe that this is a unique, historical chance for all of us ‎to raise the possibility of love in Afghanistan and beyond.‎


How to support each other on a wider scale and for the long run‎

Tell others about our shared effort of love and encouragement towards true peace and reconciliation, that is, ‎let’s seed a heart-storm! We live, love and perish in the same world!‎

You can also blog with us at http://youthpeacevolunteers.blogspot.com/‎



Our call to stand and act together in ‎
‎‘Love is how we’ll ask for peace’‎



Most of us in our disparate world today would hardly believe or be affected by our ordinary, almost mundane ‎burden.‎

But we’ve always imagined that when people come together to stand for love, life changes.‎

Most often, changes happen in only a tiny part of the world, a little community, a small fraternity; and though ‎all of which will, like human civilizations do, eventually pass away, the changes are worthwhile for holistic, ‎consistent growth.‎

In standing for love, there’ll be the un-welcome laughter of cynical disbelief and hopelessness which we’ve seen ‎much of but will not cower to.‎

We’ll be hurt by self-righteous censure that has forgotten human empathy but we’re ready for that too.‎

The cold ‘alone-ness’ of such difficulties is common to humankind, but because love is also common to all ‎people, these challenges cannot touch those restful places of love within humanity. We believe it is love that will ‎triumph.‎

It is this love that would keep us journeying in the snow and the rain, even if we fall.‎

It is this love that lends meaning to any family or friendship.‎

It is this love we’re counting on not to fail.‎

This love is how we’ll ask for peace.‎

I remember a 12 year old girl dying from leukemia. In her final hours, she urgently asked the nurses to phone ‎her estranged and separated parents to come to her hospital bedside. They did come and she did die but before ‎she passed on, she asked that they would lay aside their conflicting differences and to reconcile, not just for her ‎sake as she was soon leaving them, but primarily for their own sake. That was not an urgency of desperation. It ‎was the clear, sincere urgency of a love that would not let go. There was nothing for her young heart to lose. I’d ‎like to believe that she recognized what many of us may spend all our proud lives denying, that when bodies and ‎tongues cease, love remains.‎

It is with this urgency of love that we ask fellow human beings all over the world to restore wide-scale humane ‎relations everywhere through love and reconciliation and thus build a kinder future.‎

We believe that the world is historically waiting (see “Is this our Afghan moment of peace?”), especially those ‎of us waiting meekly in the shadows for light and warmth to arrive.‎

Yes, we’re asking the Nobel Peace Laureate President Obama to respond to our ordinary message of peace ‎from Afghanistan, the place of wars.‎

Yes, we’re asking for true peace and reconciliation.‎

But above all, we’re asking un-ashamedly to raise the possibility of love, with hope that we may smile at one ‎another in affirmative, dignified greetings once again.‎