Wednesday 5 October 2011

VPP Peace Day 2011 Images

Fairtrade Kenyan Roses and Poems for the United Network of Young Peacebuilders (UNOY) to share in The Hague

Words of Peace - Poems submitted to the Project to Share in London



"We don't get to Argue today?"
Southbank Centre, London


Searching for the Words by David Krieger (Santa Barbara, CA, USA)






For You
A Gift for Peace Day
I Have a Poem by Walter Keyombe (Nairobi, Kenya)

[Excerpt]

I have a poem for peace to the world
A poem that’ll spread the message with its fires

***

A poem that’ll sail on the oceans, seas
And lakes.

A poem that’ll transform many faces from sadness
To joy in the season of revolt
A poem that’ll fly above the moons, stars
And suns.

***

I have a poem for peace to the world
A poem that’ll never accept dictatorships
But democracy to embrace integrity and equality
A poem that’ll victoriously shine in the midst
Of darkness to steer the world for light
A poem that’ll challenge the axis of conflicts, hunger
And war.

***

I have a poem for peace to the world
A poem that’ll fight for my rights, your destiny
Against poverty and violence
A poem that’ll take its paths on the clouds
Of machinations with tribalism
To bring back reconciliation within the dust
Of bloodshed of massacre
A poem that’ll call for the struggle
Against the tyrants holding the oppressions
And discrimination towards culture
A poem that’ll condemn child trafficking, slavery
And child soldiers.

I have a poem for peace to the world
A poem that’ll curse child labor,
And early marriage on the rise
A poem that’ll condemn and break all arms, bullets
And bombs to justice that prevails
A poem with the vision to the mission
Against inhumanity, IMPUNITY
And injustice.

Yes!
I have a poem for peace to the world

A poem!
Like Martin Luther King had
A Dream.

Friday 19 August 2011

All Tomorrow's Flowers

Rose March - Oslo, Norway

Roses of Peace, Historical Testimony and the 30th Anniversary of the International Day of Peace

Roses in Norway have become the symbol of love and community after a survivor of the Utoya massacre stated “when one man can show so much evil, think how much kjærlighet (love and caring) we can show together.”  Amnesty International chose roses as the appropriate symbol [also the logo of the Labour party] in organizing the largest gathering in Norway's history.  And they've left their mark as a healing reminder ever since.

***
The Other 350

350 is the number for parts per million of Carbon Dioxide which are deemed safe for humanity - at present it's almost 392 - considered dangerous - and the awareness of the 350 number through stunning visual actions created the largest movement of simultaneous action in the history of the planet.  But 350 also denotes another - perhaps quieter marker which I desire to point out - the 350th anniversary of the Peace Testimony - a historical point when a group of members of the Religious Society of Friends (or Quakers) in England wrote and delivered a Declaration to the King of that time Charles II: "All bloody principles and practices we do utterly deny, with all outward wars, and strife, and fightings with outward weapons, for any end, or under any pretense whatsoever, and this is our testimony to the whole world."  To mark this occasion which launched the long passionate commitment to the work of peace by Quakers in the world - there are a series of events, workshops and a Peace 350 workshop pack - to reflect from 1661 to 2011 what it means to live this testimony today

***

Two hundred years ago people in the US didn’t identify as Americans first.  They identified as Virginians, Georgians, or New Yorkers.  Now everyone is American first and a New Yorker or Virginian second.  It’s just another small leap to identify oneself as a citizen of the planet first and an American second.  And then we make that how we interact with other countries.   Captain Paul Chappell

30th Anniversary of the International Day of Peace

The United Nations announced that 21 September 2011 is the 30th Anniversary of the International Day of Peace instituting a day to 'commemorate and strengthen the ideals of peace'.  The Day has gained strength and visibility by Jeremy Gilley in the UK (Peaceoneday.org) giving the day a singular fixed calendar date and Melvin Weiner of the US (Cultureofpeace.org) recently organising its listing by major international calendar distributors.  In the Netherlands this year- the city of Peace and Justice, The Hague, hosts the United Network of Young Peacebuilders - in a week of activities from workshops to concerts and on the day itself a creative flashmob.  The VPP is the 'surprise element' for the Day with hundreds of Fairtrade roses together with poems/reflections on peace from around the world- to be distributed by singing members in the historical station.  This year marks the first Playing for Change Day (on 17 September) - musicians playing in public places around the planet in support of music education and peace.  On the evening of 21 September in London the O2 Arena hosts Peace One Day's celebratory concert.  And in a community action during the day at the Southbank Centre volunteers of the VPP will share international poems and statements of peace to visitors and locals alike.

Take time this September to reflect on your stand as a world citizen.  As one friend pointed out world news is daily news now - whether that's the latest developments of the Arab Spring, the tragedy in Norway, the riots in England or the devastating hunger crisis in East Africa - this is a time to reflect and move- on the power of love and peace.  By beginning to view ourselves as participants on the global stage as well as peacemakers in our hearts, homes and communities these problems are not just 'out there' but calls to action and compassion.  To stand for the positive as Thich Nhat Hanh states- "people are dealing too much with the negative, with what is wrong. ... Why not try the other way, to look into the patient and see positive things, to just touch those things and make them bloom."  This echoes the Norwegian's statement above and is a call to all of us in these times of change, economic collapse and challenging tragedies to remember our significant blooms of peace.

Student shares her VPP flower peace poem (Amsterdam, The Netherlands)


Student creates a paper flower World for the project (Chicago, USA)


                                    World Peace Rose Gardens  (Atlanta, Georgia, USA)

Monday 14 March 2011

The Soul of Symbols

Re-Begin symbol

Flag of Colombia

Akawelle - 'also known as love'

There's a lot of conversation around symbols of the soul in our lives whether it's dreamwork, personal psychology or simple self-analysis- but what about the soul of symbols themselves.  What symbols mean and accomplish whether it's an icon of a movement, a jewel of emotion, a country's flag, a well-known brand, or other product of nature or humanity.

Many feel the present well-known peace symbol is a bit worn around the edges, associated mainly with the 1960s, therefore somewhat contained in its visual potential.  Lately I've noted contests by visual art organisations for designers to generate a new one.  The VPP is interested in 'symbols of love' - how society has marketed, mis-used or even mis-understood them - and how that creates opportunities to generate new ones.  In current history- Hallmark holidays with rather low-brow marketing machines - while sometimes clever and creative - lead us away from the true integrity of love - generating symbols and gestures tarnished and false.  The stage is set for something new and solid - sustainable, inspiring, even revolutionary when taken all the way - towards new models of meaning and power.

On the evolution of symbols - one month ago - on the 14th of February - the Fairtrade Foundation of London launched the first certified Fairtrade gold after an emotional event the week before to announce the historic occasion.  This gold will be tracked and guaranteed to ensure not only a fair wage, but an environmentally responsible extraction and real wages and benefits for the community from where it is mined.  One of the miners present - Juana Pena Endova from Peru - talked about the extremities of mining for gold, making sacrifices as a single woman with four children.  Jeweler Stephen Webster talked about the limited opportunities of mining families.  Activist Gregory Valerio commented at the event that 'symbols are more important than words' in talking about his work with ground breaking Green Gold or Oro Verde in Colombia.  Valerio who has worked tirelessly for years to transform the jewelry industry said 'We have put the soul back into gold.'

"There are very few words I can think up to describe this historic moment.  Gold has changed and the gold story now belongs to the small people again, the artisan miner and the artisan jeweler. It is these people who took the risk, not the big companies or brands. It makes me realise that all change comes from the margins and the future is always in the hands of the unreasonable person who refuses to accept the status quo".

Besides Colombia's deep and rich history with gold - it is also currently the largest exporter of flowers to the United States.  And creatively enough, home to what is probably the largest open air poetry festival on the planet - the International Poetry Festival of Medellín.  Many of these poets are dedicated to peace in their art and work- not only for Colombia but for the world.  In 2006 the Festival received the Swedish Right Livelihood Award ("the alternative Nobel Peace Prize") for its work on peace and non-violence. 

On other transformative trade projects I spoke to Zoë Adams, the Executive Director of the Strongheart Fellowship Program in Liberia- a program which inspires to generate young leaders out of the hardest hit areas of the world.  Strongheart is partly funded by partner Akawelle Jewelry - a project of 17 year old Lovetta Conto, a finalist of the Childrens Peace Price, who creates necklaces - pendants of handcrafted leaves - out of thousands of leftover bullet shells from Liberia's civil war.  [I'm suddenly reminded of Eve Ensler's statement at a recent talk in London that 'bullets are frozen tears'].

The young Lovetta Conto has taken a symbol and tool of violence and made it a symbol and tool of beauty and life.  'Life' is inscribed on each leaf.  As she states on the Akawelle website - 'It is even possible for new life to arise from something as terrible as war'.

The work of Conto and the Strongheart Fellowship serve a strong counterpoint to the current concluding trial of Liberian dictator Charles Taylor in The Hague for war crimes - which received  attention last summer when varied celebrities gave testimony regarding his gifts of blood diamonds.  Today's Liberia has the first elected female president of Africa. 

Where there is crisis there is opportunity - a refrain referenced in our own personal journeys of development.

When I was growing up in San Francisco my Italian mother recounted to me a story during the re-building of post Second World War Italy - Coca-Cola suddenly arrived on the scene with a series of presentations and 'workshops'.  What these workshops entailed one can only imagine but my mom, ever the activist - from her London mini-skirts shocking 60s Rome to arguing on the role of women in the Catholic Church - raised her hand during one of the presentations and asked the woman at the front of the auditorium if Coca-Cola contained any fruit juice.  She tells the story in dismay even now remembering clearly the response was yes.  Post-war regions around the world now, just like yesterday, present opportunities for new business.  But more importantly - a time for healing, an opportunity for social change and transformation, as well as emerging creative commerce.

Last year, when I told people I was starting a blog connected to my Project and desired to mention many named 'flower revolutions' in past history how could I know that a 'Jasmine Revolution' was about to take place in Tunisia a few months later!  Why look to history when we can look powerfully to the present?   I found three beautiful photos (this time not mine) of the three flowers of present revolutions - the lotus of Egypt, the jasmine of Tunisia, and the striking pomegranate flower of Libya.  The pomegranate is a symbol of righteous justice in many religions, and while the struggling revolution in Libya is un-named I find the name and the stunning photo I found quite appropriate.

Here they are - just some of the Flowers of Revolution of the Arab Spring:

Jasmine of Tunisia


Pomegranate Flower of Libya

Lotus of Egypt





























Coming back to the soul of symbols - Meghan Connolly Haupt, founder of C5 Company, director of Sulsso - sustainable jewelry and creator of the blog- Wearyourcommittment.com - pointed out to me:  'How many people probably wear a necklace of a gold peace dove or flower generated by slave labor.'

What kind of peace jewel is that?
***  ***

The healing Pepper flower of Liberia

Reflecting now on jewelry, gold, flowers, peace and poetry:  Whatever the past, the Earth continues to give up its poetry and reveal her treasures to us - whether it's the historic gold of South America or the intricately designed flowers of Africa.

How we respond in moving towards a more sustainable, just and inspiring future - is up to us.


Thursday 3 March 2011

Russian Peace Artist


We firmly believe that final and stable international peace is achieved only by enlightenment of the people and by permanent and impressive promotion of the brotherhood created by culture, poetry and beauty in all fields of life.
(Nobel Prize Committee on the nomination of Nicholas Roerich for the
1929 Nobel Peace Prize)

I was introduced to the work of Nicholas Roerich by a Russian performance artist in Amsterdam who informed me of his historical Peace Banner and also of the Roerich Pact signed by American president Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1935 and ratified by 36 countries.  The Pact at the time had been set-up to protect and define the importance of culture and the protection of cultural values and institutions throughout the global community.  (Unfortunately not followed by the US- when the museums of Baghdad were pillaged and not protected upon the Iraq invasion- negating their own historical promise).  The Pact did inspire the formation of laws by UNESCO to protect cultural heritages.  Roerich was also a significant painter, explorer (who visited many Eastern temples and wrote and painted about them) and a spiritual teacher along with his wife Helena Roerich, the founder of Agni Yoga or Living Ethics.  Roerich's Banner of Peace is still a recognized symbol - its trinity of three red dots in a circle - designed to be flown by international cultural institutions and museums to indicate protection and neutrality - like a 'cultural red cross'.

Roerich a major painter and international figure of his time developed a strong friendship with the then US Secretary of the Treasury- Henry A. Wallace which unfortunately led to a scandal when close letters between them were made public by politicians desiring to undermine the Democratic administration.  The press made public the 'Guru letters' - it wasn't cool at that time for a politician to be getting advice from a Russian 'mystic'!  I'm reminded of a similar controversy in recent times when Hillary Clinton was criticized for her close relationship to futurist Dr. Jean Houston.

Mikhail Gorbachev - who celebrates his 80th birthday at the end of this month at a large event announced in posters currently around London - calls Nicholas Roerich 'one of the cultural pillars of Russia.'  The Roerich legacy on peace and culture are preserved at the Roerich museum.  You can also learn more about him and his vision at the Center for Peace through Culture

Roerich was also a 'peace poet' who worked to capture Eastern spiritual thought for Western audiences in his work Flowers of Moria.

I reflect on Roerich's legacy as I work to spread individual's contributed peace poems via flowers in the cities and communities of today.  By underlying through culture our basic humanity - our world citizen identity is strengthened.  Through creativity and commerce the VPP intends to make visible - as Roerich stated - 'the fundamental quality of the human spirit.'
“Creative work is pure prayer of spirit. Art is the heart of the people. Knowledge is the brain of the people.  Only through the heart and wisdom can mankind unite and understand each other"  (Nicholas Roerich)

Sunday 30 January 2011

Flower Appeal


All the flowers of all the tomorrows are in the seeds of today. 
                                                 -  Indian Proverb

Building a community peace brand means building something that doesn't yet exist and imagining its shape and aims.  It takes courage and imagination.  In 1988 a Dutch priest working in Mexico realized the economic misery of many of the coffee workers - supplying one of the world's most popular drinks!  With others in the Netherlands he created a system that would give the workers a fairer price and help lift them out of poverty towards a more sustainable future.  He called his label Max Havelaar after the hero of a famous Dutch book of the 19th century which was critical of the Dutch colonies in Indonesia.  And the first 'Fair Trade' label was born.

Since then ethical and fair trade has evolved and morphed and diversified - other labels have emerged - like Transfair - or Fair Trade USA - and specific certification systems like FLP - the Flower Label Program in Germany and the international label Fair Flowers Fair Plants.  The certification Max Havelaar is part of the FLO or Fairtrade Labeling Organizations International.

Getting down to basics for one company - the director of Global Flower Trading (gf-trading.com) informed of me how
a portion of the sales price on all their bunches sold goes directly back to the labor force at the flower farms, which allows them to invest in life standard improvements - using funds to build schools, community centers, transportation and even electricity.  Many imported roses come from Kenya and Zimbabwe - and the Fairtrade movement works towards a better life for thousands of flower farm workers.

Emerging flower markets are also growing in post-conflict areas like Rwanda.   But what is also emerging like a shoot from a seed are what some are calling 'peace companies'  - examples like the budding Peace Ventures are covered by San Francisco journalist Lisa Katayama in her extensive article about bringing together new economies of post-conflict regions into the work of larger conflict resolution.

*  *  *

The Valentine Peace Project in its handout on 14 February out of the G Gallery in Amsterdam will again include GF-Trading's ethically traded roses
with international reflections and poems on peace submitted to the Project over the years and also carnations from Gaza.  The Dutch government has been working with the Israeli government to ease their blockade of the region to allow carnation farmers to get their products through.

"My flowers will be a means to spread peace in the world, this is a message to the whole world that peace and love starts from Gaza," says one Palestinian farmer glad to see his crops come to success.
Love and peace is loaded for many and not easy to unpack - but however one feels about good old L&P,  the giving of flowers, the work of conflict resolution and deeper meanings of love next to romance - one thing is clear - as Martin Luther King stated:  In true peace there is the strong presence of justice and 'Power at its best is love implementing the demands of justice, and justice at its best is power correcting everything that stands against love.'

The power we associate with brands makes it logical to bring the trading of global products into the conversation of conflict resolution as well as poverty alleviation - creating new ways of business - how it's done, how it's viewed, and what greater good it can accomplish.  And simple everyday items of love can be a means to do it.  Put that power into your flower this Valentine's Day.

 
          
What all of us want is simply friendship, love, and hope. - VPP poem submission, Alejandro, student, San Francisco

Be here now - understand your connection - hold your brother while he cries and try to breathe in his affection.  - VPP poem submission, student, Boise, Idaho                                                                  *A flower can show the world how simple beauty truly is and that flaws are what make the world such an awesome home - a flower is something that can be given to anyone, a friend, neighbor, lover or stranger.  And like our lives a flower is not forever, but the memory of receiving it lives on. - VPP submission, student, Marlborough School, Los Angeles
 A single rose can be my garden, a single friend, a World. -  Leo Buscaglia