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Becoming a Unit of Peace Consciousness (Part 1)

Deepak Chopra - September 21, 2008

War is the plague that human beings bring upon themselves. It is also a plague we might be able to end. On any given day since you and I were born, some part of the world has been at war–in 2003 the total number of open conflicts was thirty. In the twentieth century at least 108 million people died in wars. Of the 20 largest military budgets on earth, 14 belong to developing countries. The United States spends more on its military than the next 16 countries combined.


That war is the major problem in the world is undeniable.
The need for a new idea is just as undeniable.
The new idea is to bring peace one person at a time until the world reaches a critical mass of peacemakers instead of warmakers.

“There is no way to peace. Peace is the way.” – AJ Muste

Why Ending War Hasn’t Worked
Peace movements have tried three ways for bringing war to an end:
Activism, the approach of putting political pressure on governments that wage war. Activism involves protests and public demonstrations, lobbying and political commitment. Almost every war creates some kind of peace movement opposed to it.
Why has it failed.
Because the protesters are not heard.
Because they are worn down by frustration and resistance.
Because they are far outnumbered by the war interests in society.
Because their idealism turns to anger and violence.
Activism has left us with the ironic picture of outraged peacemakers who wind up contributing to the total sum of violence in the world.

Humanitarianism, the approach of helping the victims of war. Bringing relief to victims is an act of kindness and compassion. As embodied by the International Red Cross, this effort is ongoing and attracts thousands of volunteers worldwide. Every nation on earth approves of humanitarianism.
Why has it failed?
Because humanitarians are wildly outnumbered by soldiers and warmakers.
Because of finances. The International Red Cross’s annual budget of $1.8 billion dollars is a tiny fraction of military budgets around the world.
Because the same countries that wage war also conduct humanitarian efforts, keeping the two activities very separate.
Because humanitarians show up on the scene after the war has already begun.
Personal transformation, the approach of ending war one person at a time. The prevailing idea is that war begins in each human heart and can only end there. The religious tradition of praying for peace is the closest most people will ever come to ending war in their own hearts. Most people have actually never heard of this approach.
Why has it failed?
Because nobody has really tried it.

“Can you be the change that you wish to see in the world?” – Mahatma Gandhi


Why War Ends With You
The approach of personal transformation is the idea of the future for ending war. It depends on the only advantage that people of peace have over warmakers: sheer numbers. If enough people in the world transformed themselves into peacemakers, war could end. The leading idea here is critical mass. It took a critical mass of human beings to embrace electricity and fossil fuels, to teach evolution and adopt every major religion. When the time is right and enough people participate, critical mass can change the world.
Can it end war?
There is precedent to believe that it might. The ancient Indian ideal of Ahimsa, or non-violence, gave Gandhi his guiding principle of reverence for life. In every spiritual tradition it is believed that peace must exist in one’s heart before it can exist in the outer world.
Personal transformation deserves chance.

“When a person is established in non-violence, those in his vicinity cease to feel hostility.” – Patanjali, ancient Indian sage

The Best Reason to Become a Peacemaker
If you transform yourself into a peacemaker, you won’t become an activist marching in the streets. You will not be “anti” anything. No money is required. All you are asked to do is to go within and dedicate yourself to peace.
It just might work.
Even if you don’t immediately see a decline in violence around the world, you will know in your heart that you have dedicated your own life to peace.
But the single best reason to become a peacemaker is that every other approach has failed.
We don't know what number the critical mass is--the best we can hope is to bring about change by personal transformation. Isn't it worth a few moments of your day to end 30 wars around the world and perhaps every future war that is certain to break out?


Seven Practices for Peace

The program for peacemakers asks you to follow a specific practice every day, each one centered on the theme of peace.

Sunday: Being for Peace

Monday: Thinking for Peace

Tuesday: Feeling for Peace

Wednesday: Speaking for Peace

Thursday: Acting for Peace

Friday: Creating for Peace

Saturday: Sharing for Peace

Our hope is that you will create peace on every level of your life. Each practice takes only a few minutes. You can be as private or outspoken as you wish. But those around you will know that you are for peace, not just through good intentions but by the way you conduct your life on a daily basis.

Each day I will also share a video to accompany the peace theme for that day, so look for those as well.

Sunday: Being for Peace

Today, take 5 minutes to meditate for peace. Sit quietly with your eyes closed. Put your attention on your heart and inwardly repeat these four words: Peace, Harmony, Laughter, Love. Allow these words to radiate from your heart's stillness out into your body.

As you end your meditation, say to yourself, "Today I will relinquish all resentments and grievances." Bring into your mind anyone against whom you have a grievance and let it go. Send that person your forgiveness.

Please support my intention for peace by going to www.intent.com . Then create your own intention to add the power of your intention toward peace in the world. Share this message with all your friends to create a tidal wave of peace for the planet right now.

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Posted by Deepak Chopra at September 21, 2008 12:05 PM

Comments

Pray for Peace. Spirit says, "Stop the killing. Stop the killing."

God is Love

and

Love is God

Dear Deepak,
Your premise seems to be that one's own small thoughts and deeds can change the world.

I just want to reaffirm this with an excerpt of some Jewish Kabbala that I was reading. (I assume most of the bloggers know already the Hindu philosophy from your many books and appearances as it pertains to one's cosciousness.)

From Nefesh Hahayim (pg. 137) "Let no man (in Israel) say, "What am I, and what power have I with my humble deeds to effect anything in the Worlds?" Indeed, it behooves him to understand, know fully, and fix his heart's thoughts at every moment and instant, that not the least of his acts, words, or deeds is lost. Oh how great are his deeds, how worthy and how exalted, for each of them rises above, according to the place in which it is rooted, to produce effects in the heights, in the Upper Worlds and their refined Lights!"

I just wish I knew what rooted means because the same wording in mentioned elswhere in the same context in my printouts.

Yours,

"On any given day since you and I were born, some part of the world has been at war–in 2003 the total number"


How about since recording history, the world has experienced various degress of war and peace.

Darn if this world is one of duality


I prefer this quote of peace:

"Blessd are the Cheesemakers"
-Monty Python Holy Grail

Cheers,

Steve

Okay for Peace day I started humanitarian.me

Actually it has been sitting there for a while but had no reason to bring it up.

Click my name.

It has a little bit to read, but has yet to unfold.

#3 I Kinda agree Steve. We need to be careful about how much peace we engender.


It is not about World peace, it is about Peace in ones own world.

Let "The World" take care of itself. It is up to each of us to take care of our own world.

Peace,

Mieke

So what is peace?

Peace may not mean the end of war. It may mean the end of war being the dominant force. There may always be conflict but we don't have to kill each other to find resolution.

I don't think peace should be mistaken for a blissful utopia. More like a maturing beyond our old dysfunctional stories. I would pull my hair out if everyday was a serene blissful cotton candy day. Yo. Conflict and differences of opinion are vital to growth and to come to resolutions without killing or fighting would allow for even more growth. That takes maturity.

There is an old story that says, we are destined and it is in our very nature to be at war.

I say, there are as many if not more humans that would rather get along with each other than to fight about insignificant things such as individual beliefs and perspectives. There are more people that would rather find compromises than stand for their cause to the death.

To die or defend to the death a fleeting and ever shifting belief system, whatever that belief system is, just seems outdated to me. Then again borders seem outdated to me.

So when people say they want World peace, what would that look like?

derek

Hi Derek,

To me it means that people can live together with enough space in their own world to express themselves.

And whether this is expressed in a religion, or in a cultural way, it is alright with me, as long as they do not think that their expression is the only soul-saving way.

But it is my own firm opinion that there will never be world peace as long as an individual has not found complete peace within oneself first.

And that takes a whole lifetime to accomplish,and for some more than one lifetime :)

If one is able to accept oneself with all good and bad characteristics only then is one able to see ones life in the mirror of its surroundings, meaning that everything is a reflection of what one radiates into it.

And what one radiates, one receives back.

Inner freedom is available for everyone, it has always been this way and no one is able to take that away.

But too much talking does not lead anywhere.
And too much writing neither.

All books that have been written about peace, deal with the peace of the person who has written it.

Everyone writes his/her own book of life.

And so we can go on in an endless discussion what peace really means :)

Stick to your own Peace comes from Peace

I for one fully subscribe to that :)

Peace,

Mieke

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