Friday, March 11, 2011

REALLY SHOCKING NEWS

SHOCKING NEWS

Dear All

Death in indispensable reality but the murder of Shahbaz Bhatti is
really shocking. The day before today he met with his Mother and just
after few moments he was no more in the real Earth. What a strange.

That murder was absolutely preplanned. It shows the meek governess. I
would only say that this was not the only way to deal with the things.
We need to develop harmony. Patience, pluralism and sense of
understanding and respect for each other.

My deep sorrow is with Shahbaz Bhatti,s family and all the members of URI.



Regards
Naeem Toor
Member URI Pakistan.
Sec Gen.Rafique Research and Educational Society Lodhran,Punjab Pakistan.
Coordinator Rafique Research and Educational Earth Charter Youth Group Pakistan.
Universal Ambassador of Peace Pakistan.
Cell-0092-300-6842514

John Kurakar

Palestinian Women Deserve Celebration

Palestinian Women Deserve Celebration
By Joharah Baker

March 8 is International Women’s Day, a global event celebrating women’s rights and honoring women’s achievements throughout history. Palestine observes the occasion every year, marking it with marches, activities and events that focus on the Palestinian woman as an integral part of her own society and of the global village.

Like in other parts of the world, Palestinian women face a multitude of challenges, not solely related to their identities as women. In Palestine, Israel’s military occupation oppresses everyone, male and female. However, the trials and tribulations of women in Palestine are unique in their struggle against this occupation, in their endurance against its brutality and in their struggle to retain a unique identity as women in a predominantly male society.

Women everywhere often possess the quality of recreating themselves according to circumstances. Palestine, where hurdles are sometimes even higher than in other places, is no different. Take for example, Um Adam. Her son Osama was killed by the Israeli army on the second day of the Aqsa Intifada, September 29, 2000. Her grief, like any mother, was bottomless. However, in a final attempt to pull herself up from the abyss of eternal mourning, she made her spiritual journey to Mecca to perform the Hajj for herself and her dead son, went back to college to get a teaching degree, began teaching kindergarten and is now the principal of the very same school at which she began her humble career.

Throughout the struggle of Palestinians against Israel’s occupation, its women were always at the forefront. According to Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association, approximately 10,000 Palestinian women have been detained in Israeli jails since Israel’s occupation in 1967. Today, 36 Palestinian women political prisoners still remain behind bars.

It is not just in the realm of Israel’s occupation that Palestinian women struggle and prevail. Aside from actively partaking in the resistance – which has also contributed to their independence – Palestinian women have taken flight on the path to their own independence. In a predominantly male-run society, women here have had to fight uphill battles to achieve what other women take for granted. Especially in the remote areas of Palestine - in Gaza and in the northern West Bank - women are constantly relegated to a subordinate position in society, second to the father/husband. In a place where men are usually the breadwinners, women have fought over the years to find their place in the workforce, to achieve financial independence and to thus have a say in the decisions made about their own future and family.

Raised in a West Bank village southeast of Ramallah, Tamara was married at 17, a year shy of graduating from high school. While she maintains that it was her choice to marry so young, the coercion and pressure from family sometimes deludes these girls into thinking they made the decision on their own. After 19 years of marriage, three children and a life of submission to her businessman husband, Tamara decided to take the high school equivalency exam, go to a community college and work towards a university degree. Her husband, not thrilled with the new changes in his wife, resisted; but Tamara was unrelenting. The changes took a toll on her marriage but Tamara was clear to her husband that she only wanted a life and an identity for herself separate from him.

These two examples are just a drop in the sea of change that has taken place among Palestine’s women. Today, Palestinian women head companies and NGOs, are in government and lead Palestinian political factions. In addition, they are mothers, teachers, revolutionaries and ambassadors. More and more Palestinian families are sending their daughters to university because more Palestinian girls are demanding an education.

We still have a long way to go, though. Social change is always slow but once the ball is rolling there is no stopping it. Here in Palestine, we still battle sexism, prejudices against women and female-related issues such as early marriage and female school dropout. But the change is happening and we Palestinian women who know what independence looks like in a society that does not always celebrate it will surely pass that down to our daughters and to our sons so they honor and respect the women in their lives. It is only logical that a strong society needs strong men and women as its driving force. Palestine surely has both.

Joharah Baker is Director of the Media and Information Department at the Palestinian Initiative for the Promotion of Global Dialogue and Democracy (MIFTAH). She can be contacted at mid@miftah.org.

Prof. John Kurakar

Friday, March 4, 2011

INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON HOLY BOOKS

INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON HOLY BOOKS

Dear friends,

We are happy to announce the Fourth International Interfaith Conference on Holy Books (Intertextuality Series) to be held at the URI office, Karickam from 27-29 August, 2011. You are most cordially invited to attend. The theme will be “HOLY BOOKS AND PEOPLE OF OTHER FAITHS” (How different Scriptures view People of diverse Faiths). A book on the topic will be released during the conference with papers that are to be presented at the meeting.

Kindly note the following:

1. We will provide free hospitality. Participants will have to meet their own TRAVEL expenses.

2. Comfortable accommodation will be arranged for foreign delegates with our families in and around Kottarakkara. (Accommodation can be arranged in hotels upon request for those who can pay their own expenses)

3. The nearest airport is TRIVANDRUM (THIRUVANANTHAPURAM) in Kerala.

4. The last date for receiving papers will be 30th April. (Articles received after this date will not be published in the book)

5. Registration fees will be Rs. 500/ (Five hundred Indian Rupees)

6. Official inauguration of the program will be at 3 P.M on Saturday, the 27th at Jubilee Mandiram chapel, Kottarakkara. Concluding session will be at the Karickam International Public School at 3 P.M on Monday, 29th August.

7. Dr. Alexander Mar Thoma Centre for Dialogue, Kottarakkara and Cosmic Community Centre, Karickam will be the local organizers.

8. Rev. Dr. Ruwan Palapathwala of RMIT, Melbourne shall be the Program Manager.

9. A tour program will be arranged to Kuttalam Waterfalls (Courtalam) on Tuesday, the30th. (Expenses shared)—Two hours journey by bus.

Dr. Abraham Karickam

Executive Secretary

URI Asia Region.

Mob : 0091-9446593013

Tel : 0091-474-2454087

Email : karickam@gmail.com

www.urisouthindia.org

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

INTERFAITH COOPERATION CIRCLES







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INTERFAITH COOPERATION CIRCLES

Interfaith Cooperation Circles (CCs) are the heart of URI. Independently organized, self-governing and self-funding, they build cooperation among people of all faiths and traditions to address the most pressing issues facing their collective communities, including poverty, religiously motivated violence, environmental degradation and more.

Some examples of CC work include:

  • Winning full citizenship for poor and disenfranchised brick workers in Pakistan
  • Rescuing “child soldiers” in the Ugandan civil war
  • Brokering a truce between factions of the Christian church in Kerala, India
  • Working with government officials, teachers and police to increase social cohesion and stem violence before it starts in urban areas of Catalonia
  • Urban reforestation in New Delhi, India
  • Helping religious and cultural minorities in the conflict-prone province of Mindanao, Philippines have their voices heard by government officials in Manila

Cooperation Circles range in size from a minimum of seven members to tens of thousands, representing at least three faiths or traditions, including the non-religious, and subscribe to the shared vision outlined in URI’s Charter. They are connected to one another and the global URI network through eight regional anchor points, where regional coordinators help CCs build capacity, organize regional gatherings and trainings, and seed new CCs. URI’s global office in San Francisco provides support for regional leaders, maintains a global communications network, organizes conferences to bring CCs together from all over the globe, and supports three global initiatives, the Traveling Peace Academy, the Young Leaders Program and the Environmental Satellite.

PROF.JOHN KURAKAR