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Peace One Day: How a Global Day of Ceasefire and Nonviolence was Created - P2/2
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The United Kingdom and
Costa Rican governments
have now
joined together…
I think the important thing
is to keep talking about it
and keep trying, you know?
I’ll stay with you…
and see how it goes.
But I think it’s very
very important and
I’m really really proud.
The need for such
an enhanced approach
was originally brought
to our attention
by a UK-based
non-governmental
organization,
Peace One Day.
This is a step forward
in international relations.
… be observed
as a global ceasefire day.
Let’s stand up
on September 21,
let’s say
that we want peace,
and let’s begin…
…to make peace a reality
throughout the world
365 days a year.
Thank you, Mr. President.
May I take it that
the Assembly decides
to adopt that resolution?
It is so decided.
In 1998,
British filmmaker
Mr. Jeremy Gilley
decided to make a
documentary about peace.
What he began was
an amazing movement that
led to the establishment
of an official
United Nations
global day of ceasefire
and nonviolence.
Year after year,
this one day of peace has
made a huge difference
in countless people’s lives.
Jeremy Gilley is
the founder and chair of
the non-profit organization,
Peace One Day.
He had traveled
all over the world
and has won support
from governments
and other notable groups
and people worldwide:
the United Nations
Secretary-General,
the League of Arab States,
Nobel Laureates,
internationally famed
musicians and celebrities.
His first two films,
the outcomes
of his journey, were
“Peace One Day” and
“The Day After Peace.”
BBC’s Storyville editor
Nick Fraser said:
“In time,
everyone should watch
“The Day After Peace.”
This film was produced
in association with BBC
and Passion Pictures, and
has garnered recognition,
including the 2009
Most Inspirational Movie
of the Year
by Cinema for Peace, and
2008 Best Documentary
Award at the Zimbabwe
International Film Festival.
Mr. Gilley’s third film,
co-produced by Jude Law,
was just aired
on September 18-19
by BBC World
with transmission
in over 200 countries.
How has the day
made a difference
in people’s lives?
It was in 2008
when Jude Law
joined Jeremy Gilley
to travel to Afghanistan,
where the Taliban
had promised
to honor a ceasefire
on World Peace Day.
With the help of
the United Nations
Assistance Mission
in Afghanistan,
United Nations
Children’s Fund
(UNICEF), the World
Health Organization, and
the Afghan Government,
1.4 million Afghan children
were safely immunized
against polio on
World Peace Day 2008.
For this to really work,
you also have to include
insurgent groups,
because for them to…
We are the neutral group,
we are the absolutely
neutral group
(Yes, of course.)
who live in those areas
(Right.) and live in
the same village with them.
We have presence
in every single province
in 34 provinces.
We are going to
observe the day of peace,
and we’re going to
implement an activity
that affects and saves
peoples’ lives.
It wasn’t just the Taliban,
it was
all of the various groups
that are in that area.
International Security
Assistance Force (ISAF)
and US Coalition
and others who all said,
“Yeah, this is
a very important day.
Let’s make this work.”
And collectively
they made it work.
So there’s one example
of extraordinary things
that can happen.
Some people will go,
“Well, one day of peace,
whatever. What good
is that going to do?
How’s that really going
to make a difference?”
What we do is
we prove to the cynic
that it can work.
Because if it’s your child
who just got
that polio vaccination,
are you not
going to be saying,
“Well hang on a minute,
that day of peace
just saved my daughter
or my son’s life, or
changed their life forever”?
You’d be saying,
“Hang on a minute,
that day really
has an impact.”
Having gone into Sudan
and Afghanistan and
Burundi and Somalia and
the Congo and Europe
or North America,
I’ve seen people
suffering in a way
that is just totally unfair.
I want that to change.
And the way
it’s going to change is by
marking September 21,
if they believe
that that will make
a massive difference
and have an impact,
then they will mark it.
And that’s
what I’m here to say.
For Peace Day 2007, in
the Democratic Republic
of the Congo,
children were treated
for Vitamin A deficiency
and measles.
And in Congo’s
conflict-affected
South Kivu province,
chemically treated
mosquito nets
were distributed to
over 600,000 children.
The day works on
all kinds of levels, in fact.
And what we want to do
is promote it.
I think there’s
a lot of people out there
in the world who are doing
extraordinary things,
for the benefit of others.
And the more
that we do that
the quicker
we’re going to change.
Because if we don’t,
we’re looking at horrific,
catastrophic suffering
for all.
It will come right on
our own doorstep.
When we return,
we will hear more
about the successes
of the World Peace Day
initiatives in recent years
and its future goals.
Please stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television.
Thank you for supporting
Peace One Day.
Whatever pledge
you made for peace
on this day, take it forward.
Make it a pledge
for all your days.
Peace, perfect peace.
I’ve cried for peace.
Now
with these Peace Days,
we have an opportunity
building more every year
on every year.
It’s not a pipe dream,
it’s a reality.
Welcome back to
our program featuring
Jeremy Gilley, founder of
Peace One Day.
At the annual gala,
talented artists support
the goals of
Peace One Day.
It’s practical.
It’s historic,
because we’ve never
come together before
and now we have
that opportunity.
And we’re seeing
millions of people in
every country of the world,
doing such a thing.
Ahmed Fawzi
from the United Nations
announced at
the Royal Albert Hall
a number of years ago
when we had a big concert
with Annie Lennox
and Bryan Adams
and James Morrison
and Kate Nash and
Yusuf Islam (Cat Stevens)
and all kinds of
incredible people that
we’ve been working with.
He said that over
hundred million people,
were active
all over the world.
That was years ago.
So, we’re talking about
a big movement.
We’re talking about
something that’s growing
very, very quickly.
And thank goodness it is.
We’re gonna have peace
one day.
If you believe it.
It’s our
moral responsibility.
We are human beings.
We have the responsibility
to show the right path.
So, I fully support.
Let love rule!
What will you do to make
peace on September 21?
Peace!
On Peace Day 2006,
the World Food Program
carried out a food delivery
in southern Sudan and
60 tons were successfully
brought to those in need.
On the same day
in Congo, a girl
who had been taken away
and forced to fight was
reunited with her family.
And today, on
World Peace Day 2010,
more than 20
humanitarian organizations
are carrying out over 80
humanitarian activities
in about 30 countries.
Indeed, the day is
more than symbolic,
but also highly practical;
a window
for life-saving activities.
Today,
on September 21, 2010,
Star Syringe is delivering
safe medicine in over
20 locations worldwide.
Pump Aid is providing
clean water and
improved sanitation
to rural communities
in Africa.
The Mines Advisory Group
is removing landmines
from Sudan.
International Medical
Corps is training
health care providers
in the prevention
of acute malnutrition.
And so on.
What stands out for me
is just the sense of
being an individual
having nothing –
I’ve got
no academic background.
The only qualification
I’ve got is a D in pottery.
So, having this idea
of trying to create
the first ever day of peace
voted by every member state
of the United Nations
and then take that idea
to Afghanistan
and see lives being saved
on that day, that’s
what stands out for me.
It’s like a fairy tale
when I watch the film.
It’s a lovely story about
how many individuals
and corporations,
have made this day
a reality.
That in itself
gives me great hope
that we can change,
because we can do
extraordinary things
if we set our mind to it.
I said to them
what you have done
in terms of creation
of this resource,
and that on their behalf
we would very much
welcome the special
resource for the schools
in Afghanistan.
The UN International
Day of Peace on
September 21 every year
is not only about creating
peace between nations,
it’s about non-violence
in homes, communities
and schools.
It also can have an effect
right here in our schools.
Because on that day
young people don’t bully.
They start to learn about
the link between
sustainability and peace.
They learn about
great peacemakers.
They’ve got
a starting point
for their commitment
to a more peaceful world
through their art,
through their poetry,
through their music,
through their literature.
They’ve got an opportunity
to spend 364 days
planning for this one day
where they are going to
express themselves
and feel empowered and
inspired by their action
and that of others.
Really profound.
We’ve given thousands of
free films away
all across the UK and
now a lot of America,
and we will do
the whole of America
by the end of 2012.
But we are actively
seeking sponsorship
to be able to give the film
free to schools.
The education resource
itself is already free.
So any teacher, anywhere
in the world can go to
PeaceOneDay.org
and register
and have free access
to the material.
I’m delighted to announce
that there have been
football matches played
in honor of Peace Day
in 180 countries
around the world.
Over the years,
Jeremy Gilley has spoken
to over 30,000
young people
about making peace.
Does anyone know
the kind of things
that would help people
that we could do
on Peace Day
that could help people?
You could send out vaccines.
Fantastic, Nathan,
that’s absolutely right.
We asked
Mr. Jeremy Gilley
what he would tell
young people
to make the world
a more peaceful place.
Firstly, I’d tell them
that September 21
is Peace Day and that
that’s an opportunity
for them to express
themselves through
their art, their poetry,
their literature, their music,
whatever it might be.
I’d tell them that
they can change the world,
that their actions count,
that by making
a commitment on this day,
they can feel
really empowered, and
they will inspire others
by doing such a thing.
And also it will
benefit others, because
whatever they decide to do
is obviously going
to have an impact to
themselves, their friends,
their family, society.
And I’d say look, visit
PeaceOneDay.org
and log your commitment.
Today, September 21,
the United Nations
International Day of Peace,
we salute
Mr. Jeremy Gilley
for your courageous
and noble perseverance
in realizing
not only your own
but all humanity’s
shared dream
of a peaceful world.
We appreciate today –
a day of conscious
nonviolence among
nations and humans.
Let us renew our wish
that love and harmony soon
will prevail for all beings.
Thank you
for joining us today.
Coming up next is
Words of Wisdom,
right after
Noteworthy News.
May peace be with you
and your loved ones.
To find out more
on being part of
World Peace Day,
please visit
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