Global PeaceWorks - People of Many Faiths Serving Together
March 15th, 2004 by sfuqua
Global PeaceWorks is an organization that arranges for people of many
faiths to live and work together for two weeks, creating a model of
peace. In December they sojourned together in East Delhi, India, joining
together for talks from dignataries such as His Holiness the Dalai Lama
and the Honorable President of India, volunteered in direct service to
local communities; visited temples from several different faith
traditions, and joined together in prayer and reflection. Thirty
volunteers from nine different countries participated in the event.
When Hindus and Muslims faced each other in a communally charged
neighborhood in East Delhi in December, they looked at each other and…
smiled. Then they said prayers in Hindi and Arabic and went to work with
Sikhs, Buddhists, Christians, and Bahá'ís as volunteers in
service to a community in need.
The volunteers were invited by Global PeaceWorks - an organization that
arranges for people of many faiths to live and work together for two
weeks, creating a model of peace.
In the evenings, they heard religious leaders and statesmen like His
Holiness the Dalai Lama and the Honorable President of India Dr. A.P.J.
Abdul Kalam at the Delhi Peace Summit, but in the mornings, this group
was off to Janta Colony in Jaffarabad to serve the local people by
building a community center.
This diverse group of thirty volunteers from nine nations lived together
as an international family. They supported the Delhi Peace Summit
interfaith conference by presenting prayers of six traditions at the
opening session on Youth and the Culture of Peace, then, following Dr.
Jerry Chang of Humanity United Globally, the group facilitated
discussions on interfaith cooperation.
The core work of Global PeaceWorks is to provide “cooperative interfaith
service to people in need” — a task that program director Eric
Wenzel says is needed to complement traditional interfaith dialogue
meetings. In this case, Janta Colony, Jaffarabad which had a history of
problems between Muslims and Hindus, was selected. There the group worked
with Chetanalaya, the social action NGO of the Catholic Diocese of New
Delhi, and its representative Anthony David, a tireless man devoted to
serving people and uplifting the community.
The volunteers supported the Muslim and Hindu families in Janta colony.
Together representatives of each religion laid the foundation stones for
a new community center and worked with a shared vision of peaceful
cooperation and community improvements. Additionally, Global PeaceWorks
interfaith volunteer teams of Hindu, Muslim, Christian and Sikh visited
homes to listen to concerns and share a vision of peace. “There is no
outer peace without inner peace, so we need to work with people of faith”
remarked project coordinator Khorrum Omer, a Muslim from New Delhi.
To complement the charity work, the volunteers visited religious sites
including the famous Sis Ganj Gurudwara, the Jama Masjid and Shahi
Masjid, Mother Theresa's Sisters of Charity, the Laxmi Narayan Hindu
Temple and The Bahá'í House of Worship.
The experience was enhanced by visits with Dr. Mufti Mukarram Ahmed, Imam
of the Shahi Masjid, India's second largest mosque; Dharma Master Hsin
Tao of the Museum of World Religions; peace activist Ela Gandhi,
granddaughter of Mahatma Gandhi; Dilip Kolhatkar of the Everest Peace
Project; Baba Virsa Singh Ji of Gobind Sadan; devotees from Sri Sri Ravi
Shankar's Art of Living Foundation; the Central Baptist Church and a
community Gurudwara.
A day of reflection at a beautiful religious retreat south of Delhi
concluded this first Global PeaceWorks project which, in addition to
Chetanalaya, was supported by the Tribal Welfare Society, the
Bahá'í House of Worship, Gobind Sadan and the Religious
Youth Service.
When the project started, there were Hindu and Muslim volunteers feeling
uncomfortable in each other's presence. When the project ended, they were
embracing, crying and professing their love and respect for each other.
Volunteer Harkirat Singh of New Delhi summed up the experience saying “I
never thought the day will come when I will meet so many people from
different religions and countries and we all will work together to have
peace in the world. Global PeaceWorks has totally changed my life.”
The success of this inaugural event paved the way for a second Global
PeaceWorks project in New Delhi to be held from Dec 30, 2004 to January
7, 2005.
See www.globalpeaceworks.org for more information including ways you can
be involved. Submitted by Eric Wenzel, Director of Global PeaceWorks.