Towards Well-being for All

The history of mankind is a history of movements that have changed status quo. Large-scale change frequently begins with an action about a small issue that concerns many people. Mahatma Gandhi’s overthrow of British rule in India began as a small protest against a British tax on salt. The civil rights movement in the USA started with the action of a single person who refused to comply with segregation rules.

The transition from a world based on a war economy and armed coercion to a world of peace and well-being for all began after the Second World War, when the world entered into a period of radical reforms: Feminism, gay rights movement, peace movement, Civil Rights Movement, anti-nuclear movement and environmental movement, 1999 Seattle WTO protest, 2007 WikiLeaks, 2009 Moldova, 2009 Austria student protest, 2009 Israel-Gaza, 2009 Iran green revolution, 2010 Venezuela, 2010 Germany Stuttgart 21, 2011 Arab Spring, 2011 England, 2011 Occupy movement, 2011 Spain Indignados, 2011 Greece Aganaktismenoi movements, 2011 Italy, 2011 Wisconsin labor protests, 2012 Israel Hamas, 2013 Brazil Vinegar, 2013 Turkey, 2015 Black Lives Matter, 2017 Me Too movement, 2018 Ele Não and 2018 Yellow vest movement.

These social activities resulted in the formation of millions of community and nonprofit organizations collectively undertaking the largest movement in the history of mankind. The common goal of this movement is a comprehensive world overhaul. The movers and shakers are people from all walks of life who are remaking the world in the name of preservation of humanity, social justice and ecological health. 

Hundreds of millions of these individuals add up to an irresistible force which is rapidly changing global conditions. In Brazil, over the past 20 years, the number of citizen-sector organizations rose from 36,000 to nearly a million. In the United States this number has grown by more than 300% since 1982. Online movements such as Avaaz are growing by 1 million subscribers per month. 

Today, there are 45 colleges and universities recognized as Changemaker Campuses creating leaders of social change. The world has 22 arms controling treaties and five nuclear-weapons free zones. The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons received 122 votes from 195 representatives in the United Nations, and will become an international law creating a framework for a nuclear-weapons-free world once ratified by 24 additional states. The transition to a world of permanent peace and well-being for all is well under way. Progression towards the realization of our ultimate goal is unstoppable. 

However, “When events slip beyond the horizon of media coverage, they disappear from public discourse.” –Paul Hawker. Therefore, one purpose of Angelmedia’s Peacebuilders Association is to continuously bring to people’s attention the subject of our ultimate goal of a world of permanent peace and well-being for all. We do this through the actions of sponsored changemakers and social innovators.

But a peaceful, more equitable and kind world does not just happen. It requires the collective action of all of us. If you cannot contribute by volunteering, please contribute financially.

Faith & Peacebuilding

The hierarchy of human rights places the right to life as a prerequisite to all human rights. In the relationship between human rights, peace and war, war is a flagrant and grisly violation of our right to life.

Theologians and scholars have, for decades, debated the usefulness of the “just war” theory. The Pastoral Constitution, par. 82 and Pope Paul VI called upon the Church to say boldly that it is “our clear duty to strain every muscle as we work for the time when all war can be completely outlawed.”

In 2017, the Catholic Church reprised the Christian obligation to resist evil in the world. Pope Francis said “the threat of {nuclear weapons} use, as well as their very possession is to be firmly condemned”. Today, the Catholic Church believes that the “just war” theory is an obstacle to creative thinking which can help the world move beyond perpetual violence and war. A key goal is to outlaw all war, not to legitimize war by using or teaching the “just war” theory. 

“Blessed are the meek, Jesus tells us, the merciful and the peacebuilders, those who are pure in heart, and those who hunger and thirst for justice. (The eight Beatitudes, cf. Mt 5:3-10). It is a challenge to build up society, communities and businesses by acting as peacebuilders. Active nonviolence is a way of showing that unity is truly more powerful and more fruitful than conflict. I pledge the assistance of the Church in every effort to build peace through active and creative nonviolence.” –-message of His Holiness Pope Francis on January 1, 2017.

The overall goal is that churches, rooted in faith, will lead the world away from perpetual violence and war by developing and promoting nonviolent practices and strategies. The Catholic Nonviolence Initiative affirms the vision and practice of active nonviolence at the heart of the Church, and commits to the long-term vocation of healing and reconciling both people and the planet. Source: https://nonviolencejustpeace.net/who-we-are/

Christians we must not ‘stand idly by the blood of a neighbor’ (Leviticus 19:16). We have a duty to protect the life of our neighbor with every tool of nonviolence available to us. In the same way, we have a duty to prevent violence, preserve just peace, and promote reconciliation.

Through the Catholic Nonviolence Initiative, Church is bringing nonviolence from the periphery of thought on war and peace to the center – to mainstream nonviolence as a spirituality, lifestyle, a program of societal action, and a universal ethic. Specifically, the Church calls to:

  • Advocate for increased public and private, intellectual and financial investment in education for nonviolence and in key nonviolent practices such as restorative justice, nonviolent communication, unarmed civilian protection, trauma-healing, nonviolent resistance, and nonviolent civilian-based defense;
  • Promote integral disarmament for humanitarian purposes – eliminating weapons already banned and nuclear weapons, continuously reducing all arms and weapons, and ending the development and production of new weapons systems;

Christians are called to take a clear stand for active nonviolence and against all forms of violence. “Just peace” is the goal; nonviolence is the way. A sustainable culture of peace can only be established by nonviolence that absolutely respects human dignity. Nonviolence teaches us to say “no” to an inhuman social order and “yes” to the fullness of life.

How can a follower of Jesus embrace the teaching of active nonviolence?

Everyone has a right to demand that nuclear weapons be banned and that nuclear disarmament be realized. The very act of claiming this right is powerful. It unifies and challenges an anachronistic system, declaring it to be obsolete.

When Mother Teresa received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1979, she stated: “We in our family don’t need bombs, guns and destruction to bring peace – just get together, love one another, and we will be able to overcome all the evil that is in the world.” It’s time for communities of faith to educate and animate their members at a parish and local community level to support and promote the abolition of nuclear weapons. Development of collaborative strategies with faith-based peace-building movements and peace fellowships is needed to generate the political will that is necessary for the elimination of the most immoral device ever created by man. 

The world is longing for the restoration of goodness of life, the brotherhood of man, and care for our planet. We are extremely privileged to be the ones who have the opportunity to help humanity make a major leap in its evolution – transformation from our present world driven by wars and inequality into a world based on a culture of peace and well being for all. Angelmedia Peacebuilders Association is an independent nonprofit organization inspiring and empowering the transition to such a world through peacebuilding projects conducted by sponsored changemakers and social innovators. But a peaceful, more equitable and kind world does not just happen. It requires the support of all of us. If you cannot contribute by volunteering, please contribute financially.