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Thank you - I’m delighted to be here today, and grateful for the
invitation to share my thoughts and experiences with you on the
topic of values for peace and intercultural understanding, which, I
must confess, are very close to my heart.
I would particularly like to thank the University of South
Australia for organising this wonderful forum.
As we know, the global landscape has changed in recent times for
all of us, making the themes of this forum more timely and relevant
than ever before.
It’s ironic that the terrorist attack in New York occurred on
Tuesday September 11 - also the international day of peace which no
one seems to have commented on in the media. Since then we’ve
heard very little about peace but much about war.
It’s even more ironic that the very week before the September
11 terrorist attacks, representatives from nations all around the
world gathered in two places:
One, at the international anti racism conference in Durban, South
Africa, discussing what it is that we wish to move away from (namely
racism, discrimination, racial hatred and xenophobia) in the
southern hemisphere,
And on the other side of the world, in the northern hemisphere in
Geneva, at the same time, ministers of education and senior
officials from over 188 countries met for the first time in 5 years,
at the international conference on education, the theme of which
was: education for all for learning to live together - in other
words, what we seek to move towards - namely living together in
peace and harmony - an ideal towards which we should never cease
striving to reach, and never make the mistake of slipping back into
complacency.
You may know that last year was the international year for a
culture of peace, and this year is the first year of a decade,
dedicated by the UN to a culture of peace and non violence for the
children of the world.
This year is also the international year for mobilisation against
racism, and if that weren’t enough, it’s also the international
year for a dialogue among civilisations, inspired by Samuel
Huntington’s controversial book: A Clash of Civilizations, in
which he proposes that conflicts and clashes between cultures and
civilisations are the greatest threat to world peace, and are likely
to dominate the future of world politics. He further proposes that
the world’s major conflicts will be across civilisational and
religious lines, which we are unfortunately witnessing as we speak,
in the Balkans, in the Middle East and regrettably in our own
neighbourhood.
From this conglomeration of international years, all emphasising
the need for peace, intercultural dialogue and freedom from racism
and conflict, one can gauge the very high priority that the
international community places on the need to find ways to live
together in harmony, a priority that we here in Australia also share
in a society, made up of indigenous, eastern, western and middle
eastern cultures, speaking over 120 languages, representing all the
world’s major religious faiths, and in which a very high
proportion of people come from diverse cultural traditions.
One could say that we have the united nations right here in our
backyard, and that we are free to express our diversity but also
strive to be united by a commitment to a shared framework for living
together as citizens, embodied in our constitution, our democratic
processes, our laws and so on. Whether this occurs in practice of
course is another matter.
[overhead transparency re Australian framework]
The Australian citizenship council conducted a survey of the
community to develop a “compact” for living together in harmony
based on 7 core Australian civic values (to distinguish from
personal values) :
Recognition of the unique status of Aboriginal & Torres
Strait Islander peoples commitment to the land,
The rule of law,
Representative liberal democracy,
Principles of tolerance & fairness
Acceptance of cultural diversity
Recently I returned from the international conference on
education in Geneva, on learning to live together, which I mentioned
earlier.
Throughout the conference was repeatedly emphasised the necessity
for a global ethic and shared values for living together
successfully in a globalised world, but also repeatedly emphasised
was that learning to be - to understanding oneself is an essential
pre requisite for learning to live together and for effective
dialogue to occur across civilisations and cultures.
Given the long history of violence as a means of resolving
conflicts among cultural and religious groups, the UNESCO Delors
report on education for the 21st century placed learning to
live together, not simply as one of the four pillars of education
for the future, but as the greatest challenge facing education in
the 21st century.
It insisted that every national education system give priority to
learning to live together, by children developing an understanding
of themselves and others, by strengthening their own cultural
identity and appreciating that of others, learning to manage
conflicts and live in an interdependent world, in a spirit of
respect for cultural pluralism, mutual understanding, peace and
harmony.
UNESCO further argues that educational reforms should
systematically focus on creating unity within diversity by
developing the basic human values which underlie most cultures and
major religions of the world and are embodied in the universal
declaration of human rights.
However it’s not that simple to identify nor to agree upon what
are those values that we share as human beings which can serve to
unite us.
We may find some clues among the commonalities between the great
religions of the world.
Values which can form a universal secular culture which
transcends, without negating or denying, individual faiths and
cultures, but which in fact draws on the best, the highest, the
noblest of all of them.
We can look to certain international documents to guide us, such
as the universal declaration of human rights and other agreements
relating to civil, political and other rights, responsibilities and
freedoms.
A UN report entitled Developing a global ethic for
building a culture of peace based on shared values and respect for
diversity identifies the following universal values as being
necessary for peace:
- Freedom
- Equality, equal opportunity
- Democracy
- Peace
- Human rights
- Pluralism, diversity
- Mutual respect, dignity
- Individual worth
- Responsibility
It’s interesting to note that in a small survey conducted among
South Australian school communities the following common core values
were identified however with differing emphases:
Caring, mutual respect, responsibility, equity, valuing
diversity, trust/ honesty/integrity, self-worth/ self-esteem,
success/ excellence/ quality, creativity, cooperation/ teamwork.
Some of these are also what we might call personal values or
qualities to which we might aspire.
The UNICEF living values education program identifies 12 such
universal values:
Peace, respect, love, happiness, freedom, honesty (trust),
humility, tolerance, cooperation, responsibility, simplicity, unity.
I would venture to say that those values are already inherent
within all of us, simply because we are human beings. However the
emphasis placed on various values in each culture may be slightly
different.
Some of the keys to having those values emerge from within us,
are self understanding, authenticity and peace within ourselves, so
those values become integrated into our own lives, underpinning who
we are - our very identity, which some would say is love, and we all
know how powerful love and unconditional acceptance can be.
So that by living and being those values, it is possible to also
draw it forth from others - call them to their finest qualities.
Dialogue
It may be useful for today’s purposes to be clear about what we
mean by “dialogue” whether that be among civilisations,
cultures, religions, belief systems, different interest groups, or
whatever.
But to engage in genuine dialogue is not about seeing others as
being categories of peoples, nor about the allocation of certain
stereotyped characteristics to people as a group or a block or a
monolith - people are not monoliths - any society, culture or
civilisation is made up of people, of individuals who belong to
families, who are someone’s son or daughter, who are sisters,
brothers, fathers, mothers, uncles, aunts, work colleagues. All
capable of feeling and expressing the full range of emotions,
including love and compassion, who for the most part want a safe and
fulfilling life for themselves and for their children.
To categorise others, is to focus on their difference rather than
on their similarity to us all as human beings, fellow members of
humanity, living together on this small planet.
And while there are indeed may differences between us which can
enrich us all, if we would only choose to understand each other and
to learn from difference, it is in fact those similarities which can
unite us as one human civilisation, with values which we agree to
share, while expressing our rich diversity of beliefs and
lifestyles.
So what do we mean by dialogue?
Dialogue usually means talking with others or conversation which
can be social or superficial and not terribly meaningful sometimes.
Much more than conversation is needed for genuine and deep
understanding and empathy to occur between people who may have very
different beliefs, values, customs, appearance and behavioural mores
- and particularly where language and verbal communication may be a
barrier.
No, something far more profound and meaningful than mere words is
needed to create the experience of true understanding, to bridge
generations of separation and otherness, fear and distrust, to
overcome deep seated assumptions that are locked into visual images
and symbols rich with meaning which register deep within us, below
the level of our conscious awareness, bypassing the intellect and
triggering irrational emotional reactions of fear, hatred and even
loathing.
These days we’re bombarded with very powerful visual images.
One only has to recall the image of the second aircraft crashing
into the world trade centre tower which we have seen on our screens
maybe dozens of times - now deeply ingrained in our memory, as are
the distressing personal stories of people who have lost loved ones,
who only moments before death called them to say how much they loved
them, followed closely by other frequent images of men in turbans
holding guns menacingly, ostensibly in training to kill westerners.
We are now witnessing the impact that such images can have in
manipulating the thoughts and emotions of those who have
subsequently harassed innocent Muslim women and children in our very
own neighbourhoods.
How can dialogue overcome and bypass these powerful evokers of
unconsciously held fears, even in the most enlightened among us?
Genuine dialogue requires two way communication and both/all
parties need to be willing to engage in it:
Firstly, to speak authentically, not just from the head, so that
we sound smart and clever, but also from the heart, revealing what
lies beneath the surface, exposing who we really are, transcending
our persona, our status, our position, and cultural expectations,
sharing our hopes, our fears our deeply held aspirations to create a
better world - one in which love, beauty, gentleness, honesty,
respect and compassion prevail.
Speaking of what is truly important to us, has us discover to our
immense surprise, that others also consider those same things to be
important, no matter how different they may seem.
Secondly, but more importantly is genuine listening, while
suspending all judgement, assessment and evaluation, but listening
with full acceptance of the person before us and giving total
attention not just to the words, but listening for meaning and
understanding, listening for feeling, listening for the essence of
who the person really is - seeing past their form, past their
physical appearance and hearing past their accent -tuning into a
deeper level of open hearted communication which may involve
visualising and imagining how it must be for this person, how it
might feel to be in their shoes or circumstances.
Now this all sounds very obvious and easy, but to truly
understand others we first need to understand ourselves, to explore
our own identity and the motivations for why we do and say the
things we do, and to explore our personal values - to really know
what is most important to us and to live authentically by that - and
not all of us do that. And we haven’t learned to do that - unless
we’ve made an enormous effort as adults to teach ourselves.
I’d like to add another level to the power of dialogue and that
is listening for learning and for fulfilling potential - asking
oneself while listening - what am I learning from this dialogue? How
does the different way in which this other person is seeing, doing,
thinking, experiencing and being in the world - what is this
teaching me about myself? How can this help me expand my repertoire
of thinking, doing, being etc to fill out who I am, to become more
fully who I have the potential to become.
What I’ve noticed over the years from working with people from
so many different cultures, is how much I continue to learn from the
richness of that exposure, in particular to the different ways of
thinking and seeing the world, which has expanded my own thinking in
ways that I would never have imagined possible.
I liken it to the opening of the many petals of a flower - as
each person contributes something new to me, it adds to who I can be
and as a result I am becoming more fully who I have the potential to
become. Those that are different from me have strengths that I don’t
have, and can see things in ways that I can’t see them, and
through their sharing I come to see the world through their eyes and
be enriched as a result. And I trust that others may in turn
experience this and be enriched when I share who I am with them.
To me this is the essence of genuine dialogue for the betterment
of us all. The challenge however, is two fold. Firstly, for both
parties to want to engage in genuine dialogue, because it’s a two
way process. And secondly, to find or to create appropriate
opportunities for authentic dialogue to take place and this can
occur every day in every way - any time any place.
But we are challenged to go deeper through our dialogue, to
understand the diverse systems of thinking, world views and cultural
paradigms held by other cultures - to experience and understand
different ways of knowing, thinking, doing and being in the world
and seeing the world from different perspectives, through different
eyes, standing in another’s shoes.
If the generations who follow us, are to envisage different
futures, and entertain diverse possibilities for sharing a future
together, in ways which enable well being for all, and for the
preservation of natural life and resources, they will need to
examine the many complex problems that we have unwittingly created,
from many diverse perspectives, to be able to come up with workable
solutions. As Einstein is reputed to have said:
“one cannot solve a problem from the same system of thinking
which created it.”
In Australia, we have the opportunity to learn and benefit from
many diverse cultural perspectives and different approaches to
problem solving, which when brought together, may well contain the
key to solutions as yet not conceived, including the discovery of
perhaps surprising and unorthodox paths to both inner peace and
intercultural understanding, reconciliation and harmony externally,
in Australia and further afield.
A search which may lead us from identity to interdependence and
to unity in our diversity.
Peace to you all - thank you.
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