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To mark the International Day of Peace 2017, we asked humanist thought leaders from around the world for their views on this central human value: peace.
The ambition to achieve “world peace” can sound like a cliche, or at least a remote dream. Sometimes the whole concept is dismissed: “peacenik” is a derogatory term, “peace” itself may be regarded as long-term unobtainable. And yet, this near-universal value of peace is a serious concept. Human beings have known greater or lesser degrees of peace, just as we know greater or lesser degrees of freedom. And through our actions we can contribute to building or maintaining peace, or we can imperil peace, engendering enmity and violence.
So, is peace as such something we can work toward? What is
peace and why is it desirable? What
needs to be in place for peace to be achieved and sustained? — or what
obstacles must be overcome to realise long-term peace?
We asked some leaders of the humanist movement, activists
and thought leaders from around the world for their views on the value and
attainability of peace. Their responses follow below.
We celebrate Peace Day this year in the midst of chaos – one
lunatic is threatening to wipe out the other with nuclear power; thousands of
Yemenis are getting killed; a mass exodus of Rohingya is occurring; Syria
remains a war-torn country; more than 60 million refugees have been displaced
because of conflict, persecution, and hunger; religious and nationalist
extremism and imperialism are triumphing, income inequality has grown to the
highest level within the past half century – and the list could go on.
Maybe we need to go back to the drawing board and define
what the word ‘peace’ means and who really wants it before we seek it.
— Rafida Bonya Ahmed, humanist activist, author; Visiting
Research Scholar at UT-Austin
Peace is not merely the absence of violence. It is the absence of violence and tranquility accompanied by feelings of happiness, satisfaction and well-being. It is a worthy value because the alternative leads to pain, suffering and death.
When I have faced conflict in my own life, I sometimes chose
to just walk away and maintain the peace. As a wise man once said, “Time lost
for getting even is time lost for getting ahead.” That is one way we achieve
peace.
However, the best way to achieve peace is to work for human
rights, gainful employment for all, fairness, equal opportunity for all, and so
forth. Practical efforts for achieving peace include government aid,
organizations working for fair wages and human rights, strong ethical systems,
the promotion of good science, and, paradoxically, democratic governments with
strong armed forces. (Sometimes peace can only be achieved by fighting just
wars, like the North against the South during the Civil War to abolish slavery
in the U.S.)
Humanism is about solving our differences peacefully. We know
of many religious wars, but organized humanists have not settled their
differences with violence.
— Norm R. Allen Jr., writer, editor, former executive
director: African Americans for Humanism, author: The Black Humanist Experience
I could never understand why many of the world religions
associate peace with death, as in the expressions that the dead “have finally
found peace” or “should rest in peace”. To me, peace is a quality we should
look for in life, as it is not an absence of war, not an absence of aggression
or anger, the way they are absent in a dreadful nothingness of non-existence.
Instead it is an appreciation of life, an understanding that war may not always
be the best solution and a choice one makes not to fight.
War has been, of course, an inherent part of the history of
humanity and it is also well known to our cousins, chimpanzees. To think that
people can suddenly and magically stop fighting each other is naivety. Having
said that, I do believe that as humanity we should aim at peace, because we
are, after all, able to oppose our instincts and do better than the
chimpanzees.
I believe a peace of mind of each individual is what is
first of all required to achieve peace in its wider, social sense, and
examining our societies we must conclude we are still very far from succeeding
in this first step. We should nevertheless try to make it happen. A peace of
mind is not only achieved by ensuring livelihoods at a certain economic level
and offering safety and stability. It’s also about providing answers about the
nature of the universe, humanity’s place in that world, and about giving people
a sense of purpose in their lives.
Curiosity, solidarity and a feeling of belonging to a global
family of animals, in which every human is like a sibling to us: these
qualities could form a state of mind which is needed for peace. People should
stop perceiving everyone in the instinctive categories of “them” and “us”… When
you forget all of these labels and start looking at another human being as a
human being, nothing more and nothing less, only then you will seriously start
valuing that person’s life. And only if you value life, will you stop a war.
What I perceive as the biggest obstacle on the path to peace
are all the ideologies which oppose the scientific truth of our origins and all
those which favour a certain group of people against others. Putting aside
ideologies like fascism or totalitarian communism which in the first place
don’t treasure the human life at all, the biggest problem we need to face is
the exclusivity of religions, which make their followers believe they are
better than everyone else. Even if they seem to teach love and friendship, they
can’t let that exclusivity disappear, because they are built as memeplexes
which need to oppose, or fight if necessary, the other religions (and of course
the atheists or infidels even more). Obviously religion will not always lead people
to war, but it won’t let them be at peace either. Maybe that’s why it offers
them a promise of peace after death?
— Kaja Bryx, vice president of the Polish Rationalist
Association and vice president of European Humanist Federation
Most people want peace, and if they don’t, then living in a
state of war usually corrects them (think for example of the ISIS converts in
recent years who opted to fight in the name of a caliphate but soon fled, or
wanted to return home, when they saw the horror entailed by that violent
ideology).
But we must also recognise that the state of peace means
more than the absence of war. A world devoid of humanity, in which civilization
had been annihilated by weapons of existential threat, would not be a world “at
peace”. A state of peace means people living together despite differences,
which means they must be talking about their differences openly and honestly in
an ‘open society’. A state of peace means cooperating together, which means
society will not be static, it will be evolving, and there will be progress,
which must be worked for. A state of peace exists not in a vacuum but within an
environment, so our society must be sustainable, our progress must be
responsible and prudential.
Peace, then, is not an abstract harmony that we can hope
will descend upon us by wishing for it. It is something that will prevail – and
can only be sustained – when our most universal and necessary human values are
being fulfilled.
— Andrew Copson, president of the International Humanist and
Ethical Union (IHEU) and chief executive of Humanists UK
Peace is not the absence of all conflicts. Peace means that conflicts are basically carried out without violence.
Peace is important because in its absence there can be no
dialogue, therefore only destruction and one image of destruction is war as we
know it, see it in other parts of the world, or imagine it.
The major conflict in my life was the conflict between the
religion I was born into with its societal social contract. The moment I left
Islam it was the moment I fell out of the social contract, and this results in
a conflict which unfortunately was carried out with violence. Therefore, in
order to overcome this conflict, I became aware that we need to establish a new
social contract which is not based on religion but humanistic Enlightenment
values, which guarantee the individual freedom of all members of the community
or society regardless of religious or political belief. And that is what IHEU
works for.
I may seem a bit idealistic here, but I believe peace needs
global citizens, and a charter of rights for each and every one of us. It means
we need to agree on a moral ground which all humanity can share: the
universality of human rights, regardless of religion, culture or ethnicity. This
concept is at the core of the universal declaration of human rights and the
Enlightenment. The United Nations can help the world achieve peace because (at
least theoretically) it aims at the promotion of dialogue and universal human
rights.
— Kacem El Ghazzali, secular activist and occasional IHEU
representative at Geneva
Peace is community cohesion. When examining some of the most
appalling genocides, the Holocaust, Rwandan, Bosnia and the likes, one of the
very first tactics used is to divide communities.
The world is a divided place, with crises and conflict going
on everywhere. The Rohingya crisis, Syrian displacement, Yemen, the
Israel-Palestine conflict, the South Sudan humanitarian crisis, and many more.
But we turn a blind eye to them and focus on our efforts to make our lives more
comfortable.
When one loves and cares for someone, they could never dream
of harming them. Love, compassion and cohesion are missing in the world today.
Until we successfully bring communities together, to look beyond their
differences, we will never be successful in creating a more peaceful world.
Until we are all viewed as equal citizens of the world,
there will be no peace.
— Sadia Hameed, spokesperson for Council of Ex Muslims of
Britain
The term peace is difficult to define. Often described as an
absence of war, that is armed conflict. Such a definition is a narrow one. Wars
do not always involve arms in the literal sense. One may not be involved in any
armed conflict but is still not at peace.
Peace is a state of the mind; a state of relative personal
or collective content, happiness and well-being. Peace is relative because life
has many sides and no one is totally and comprehensively at peace in every
aspect of life and at every point in time. Thus there is no perfect peace.
Still peace is a worthwhile pursuit because it is necessary
for human existence and flourishing. Peace is a prerequisite for progress. And
human beings can achieve peace by being imaginative about solving human
problems and confronting existential challenges. Humanistically speaking, peace
is vital for the realization of happiness in the here and now. It is a resource
that is needed in living to its fullness this only life we have.
— Leo Igwe, human rights advocate, activist against
witchcraft accusations, Distinguished Services to Humanism Award recipient 2017
Peace is not only the absence of conflict or war. Peace is a
state of mind that implies one searches for compromise rather than conflict,
settlement rather than blunt opposition, interaction rather than dissociation.
Peace is a personal attitude towards everything and
everyone, it’s a way of handling difficult, complex and stressful encounters in
a spirit of construction rather than destruction and conflict. Peace is also a
way to behave in group, a way to approach others, a way to work and build interactions.
Peace is what we all crave for, but could not yet achieve.
It is one of the most beautiful prospects for humanity, that we all keep as our
aim in our work and progress.
Peace is the core business of Humanists, who propose an open
and respectful set of moral values and means to approach life. Humanism is
about peace and freedom for all.
— Anne-France Ketelaer, vice-president of the International
Humanist and Ethical Union (IHEU), secretary-general of deMens.nu
Coming from a region which has seen conflicts between groups
of followers of religions due to anything from a perceived desecration of a
place of worship, to two people born to parents following different religions
being seen together, I learnt that peace in society can be disturbed by various
forces who want to derive benefits from such conflicts. Again at the national
level we have seen wars between our country and our neighbours.
Peace at every level can be achieved by making human beings
accept that others can be different. Tolerance of the other point of view is
the only way to achieve that. People should be taught to tolerate opinions and
practices of others as long as they do not infringe over the human rights of
others.
Humanism stands for peace as its basic tenet that all humans
are equal and that everyone has a right to happiness, and upholding human
rights as the best guarantor of peace for all humankind. When all are
considered as equal, and the views of all are to be accepted, then peace
naturally follows. Violation of human rights of anyone is violence and that has
no place in a peaceful society.
Peace is destroyed by those who want to serve their own
vested interests by promoting conflicts among various social groups, raising
emotional, cultural, religious, or territorial issues. They create a ‘them and
us’ situation – and they are the only ones who can protect us against them!
Equality in all spheres of life shall raise the physical, mental and emotional
well-being of people, and that will lead to peace. In fact we can see that the
more egalitarian societies where human rights are respected and protected are
more peaceful than those where their violation, and the exploitation of the
weak, is rampant. So, peace, like conflict, cannot survive in a vacuum. It has
to be a feature of a society where there is equality and respect for human
rights.
— Narendra Nayak, president of the Federation of Indian
Rationalist Associations
I must live in a society that let’s me do this, and have the
integrity to live my values instead of just talking about them.
This of course includes how I treat other people. But there
is another side to it: Freedom of thought and speech. Can I say what I think?
If I am silenced in whatever way or have to lie, I do not feel at peace.
So I am working towards a world in which everybody has this
freedom and can express themselves as well as openly question what others say
without being pressured to stay silent.
— Marieke Prien, president of the International Humanist and
Ethical Youth Organisation (IHEYO)
War thrives on the dehumanization of our follow human
beings. An essential part of the training of soldiers is desensitizing them,
overcoming their natural inhibitions against killing or maiming people.
Political support for war depends on stereotyping the enemy, dehumanizing them
so that they are seen as just ‘foreigners’, ‘communists’, ‘terrorists’,
completely alien, not real people.
A constant theme in the literature of war, historical and
literary, is the scene where a soldier encounters, perhaps kills, an enemy
combatant and then becomes aware, by talking to him, or by looking through the
papers and photos of the dead man, that the enemy is a human being just like
himself.
Essential to creating a culture of peace, then, is the
activity of bringing people together, sharing human experiences, overcoming
stereotypes, promoting the awareness of our shared humanity. And that’s
humanism.
— Richard Norman, Emeritus Professor of Moral Philosophy at
the University of Kent, UK
Peace is the need of the hour, but it will not be possible
without strict implementation of rule of law as per international legal
instruments.
But laws differ in different countries. In theocratic
societies, the law may prohibit free expression as blasphemy. In democracies
like India, cow-lynching and beef-eating may be banned, but the ban in
principle violates my right to food choices.
Therefore, peace may not be achieved if national laws are
framed in a way that violate minority rights, or even our rights to choice and
to dissent.
We feel that no peace could be attained without societies
being inclusive and respecting the idea of social justice, which cannot be
achieved without understanding historic wrongs. Today, many powerful, dominant
communities are made to feel that they too have been victimised and denied
rights, and so the political class dilutes the whole agenda of social justice.
Once we understand that the world is diverse, and each of us
enjoys our own diversity, then we will see it is not a burden but a thing to
celebrate. Once we agree that nothing is final and all religious books and laws
can be critiqued, it does not mean that we are deliberately offending someone,
and disagreeing does not mean we have become enemies. Disagreements can be
democratically resolved, or even left alone if that does not violate the basic
human rights of the people.
— Vidya Bhushan Rawat, humanist and human rights defender
based in Delhi, India
Life is complicated enough even for those of us who are fortunate enough to live in an environment free of conflict. Demands on our time, attention, and financial resources make it difficult enough to flourish. Flourishing, or living a better life, is not only about our own happiness, but ideally also about having the energy and resources to contribute to improving the welfare of others. And if even those of us living in relatively conflict-free environments struggle to fulfill our potential and to help others do the same, it is perhaps inconceivably difficult to imagine the challenges of doing so in an environment where one’s physical safety is under threat, whether that threat be from war or the less-dramatic – but nevertheless significant – impediments presented by bigotry and intolerance.
Interpersonal and intergroup conflict is an obvious handbrake
to human and societal flourishing, and it serves all of our interests to
promote and protect peace whenever and wherever we can.
— Jacques Rousseau, lecturer in critical thinking and ethics
at the School of Management Studies at the University, Cape Town, founder and
chair of the Free Society Institute, South Africa.
Peace for me is a new path that all Colombians have started on; it was our grandparents’ dream and now is our responsibility to build it. For me, we can build peace through the revolution of small things, every day, at every time, respecting each other, empowering women, and recognising the value of every human being, especially if he/she is different from me.
Peace is possible if we dream it, if we work on it, together
from every part of the world where women are willing to do it, because women
are the main peacebuilders.
— Sofia Vinasco-Molina, peacebuilder with the Truth, Memory
and Reconciliation Commission of Colombian Women in the Diaspora (TMRC), member
of Atheist Bogotá, Bogotà Atea
Source: IHEU
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