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Dialogue & Alliance
If you don’t like the way the world is, you change it. You have an obligation to change it. You just do it one step at a time. |
| Passing on Traditions and Values to the Coming Generations in the UK |
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| By Raul Kamal, Sant Nirankari Mission, UK |
| Monday, September 10, 2007 |
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An enlightening conference at the September 2007 Global Peace Festival in London aimed to provide some answers to questions such as “how can communities hand down traditions and values from old to young?” Sudhir Kundi Ji inaugurated this conference by introducing himself and the ethos of the Sant Nirankari Mission by stating that through spiritual awakening, or the knowledge of God, man could become closer to his fellow men and this Almighty God. A representative of the Jewish faith stated the importance of a child’s education and highlighted the fact that she had chosen a school with an ethnic and religious mix for her children so that they learn to peacefully coexist from a young age. David Freeland from the Universal Peace Federation stated that his father’s illness brought his family closer together. Appreciating the importance of family, David decided to listen to his family and make his choices in accordance with their teachings. David believes people react to how you treat them, which is echoed in the statement that love is the only commodity which multiplies when you divide it.
Alan recalled that his father used to make him clean his own shoes for inspection every Sunday evening. This discipline remained with Alan who, as an interviewer, used to look at prospective employees' shoes, believing that a person who could not respect himself or make an effort to impress his potential employer should not be employed. Concluding his discourse, Alan reiterated that the values of humanity had been lost or misplaced and that mankind must rediscover these values to create a better society |