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Articles from SHARE International - Copyright 1992, All rights reserved.
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Electronically reprinted with permission.
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For reprint permission, contact TARA Center, UID 73437,1345, PO Box 6001,
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No.Hollywood, CA 91603.
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CHILDREN FIRST: BUILDING A GLOBAL AGENDA
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by Audrey Hepburn
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Actress Audrey Hepburn spent five years of her young life in Nazi-occupied
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Holland during World War II. She survived the deprivation with a "marvellous
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family," a diet consisting largely of turnips, and "wonderful conversations
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about what we were going to eat after the war." When the end of the war came,
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she was one of the first recipients of UNICEF aid to Europe. Hepburn could not
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have known then that more than four decades later, in 1988, she would be
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invited by UNICEF to take on "her most wonderful and rewarding role," as
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fellow actor Gregory Peck put it
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UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador.
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Her compassion and commitment carry her beyond fund-raising benefits to
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sometimes difficult and dangerous fieldwork in countries such as Ethiopia,
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Sudan, and El Salvador. For all her efforts, she is paid by UNICEF the royal
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sum of US$1 per year. Hepburn gave the following talk recently at the
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Commonwealth Club in San Francisco.
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"Until four years ago when I was given the great privilege of
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becoming a volunteer for UNICEF, I, like all of you, was overwhelmed
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by a sense of helplessness when watching television or reading about
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the indescribable misery of the children and their mothers in the
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developing world. If I feel less helpless today, it's because I have
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now seen what can be done, and what is being done by UNICEF, by many
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marvellous agencies, churches, governments, and most of all, with
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very little help, by people themselves.
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Today we stand at the crossroads: Our world has changed dramatically
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in a short time, and we must now plot a new course for the future.
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I'm here on behalf of UNICEF to talk about where children fit into
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the new course, to talk about priorities. We have to recognize that
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children have not been our greatest priority, but they must be. And
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if we seize the opportunity now before us, they really can be.
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I was among the first recipients of UNICEF aid after World War II,
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which is why I have such a deep, personal appreciation for UNICEF.
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Mine was the first generation to live in the ominous shadow of the
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nuclear age, and we were the first children to grow up with the term
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"Cold War" and all its divisive and paranoid implications. We had
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survived the bombing of Europe only to find ourselves, in a very real
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sense, coming of age in another war, the costs of which were very
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steep indeed.
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Deaf ears
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This conflict between East and West soon became a political framework
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for the entire globe. The superpowers intervened in developing
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countries in order to gain territorial advantages, and rival factions
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in these countries were all too willing to choose sides in exchange
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for support in their internal struggles. The prevailing world order
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was marked by barricades, real and imaginary, and it fostered a
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mentality of us versus them. The real losers, of course, were the
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children: the children of Africa, Latin America, Asia, and the Middle
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East who suffered from daily neglect. The choice between guns and
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bread had never been more immediate nor lopsided as it was during the
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height of the Cold War.
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UNICEF, the world's leading voice for children, tried to protect
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them. UNICEF reminded governments time and again that the needs of
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children were urgent and the most important, but its warnings fell on
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ears that were either deaf or simply too preoccupied to listen. When
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I first became involved with UNICEF, the organization that had meant
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so much to me and many other children in post-war Europe, I didn't
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think I'd live to see the end of that bitter struggle. Like the
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children of countries like Lebanon and Mozambique, who have known
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little peace, I had grown up with the Cold War, and it was part of
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all of our lives.
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Then, and it seemed to happen overnight, the world changed
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dramatically. Like the Berlin Wall and the Soviet empire, the old
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order has come tumbling down. We now have something that is so rare
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in the course of civilization: a second chance.
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Quiet catastrophe
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Now, more than 45 years after it pleaded with the world to remember
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its children, UNICEF is once again making the case for our next
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generation. As the new world order comes into focus, UNICEF is
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reminding the world's leaders of the devastating realities. While the
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world was busy fortifying the ideological chasm that divided it, the
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children have been paying for it with their lives: 40,000 a day, 15
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million a year. No earthquake, no flood, ever claimed 40,000 children
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on a single day. Though these children are the quiet catastrophe and
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never make headlines, they are just as dead. By any measure this is
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the greatest tragedy of our times. They've been dying from
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preventable diseases, including measles and tuberculosis. They've
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been dying in wars, caught in the cross-fire of those who should have
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been protecting them. They've been dying for lack of proper nutrition
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when the world has more than enough food. They've been dying from
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dehydration caused by diarrhea more than from any other single cause
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because they don't have clean drinking water.
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World Summit for Children
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In September of 1990, when the old world order was showing signs of
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collapse, UNICEF hosted 71 heads of state at the World Summit for
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Children in New York to address the appalling situation of children.
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The summit yielded a historic agreement on specific goals to help
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children by the year 2000. In its latest message to the world's
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leaders, UNICEF released its 1992 State of the World's Children
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Report. In this year's report, UNICEF offers 10 agenda items for the
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formation of a new world order.
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I won't talk about all the specific propositions, but I would like to
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mention a few of them:
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a) That the promises of the World Summit for Children be kept. These
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include a one-third reduction in child deaths, and a halving of child
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malnutrition by the year 2000.
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b) That demilitarization should begin in the developing world, and
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that falling military expenditures in the industrialized countries
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should be linked to increased, unconditional international aid and
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the solving of global problems. Currently, developing countries spend
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about $150,000 million on arms each year. Meanwhile, the five
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permanent members of the UN Security Council sell 90 per cent of the
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world's arms. What does this mean? It means that we are entrenched
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as a global community in a destructive cycle of weapons
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proliferation. Achieving all of the summit goals would require some
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$20,000 million a year, an amount equal to two-thirds of the
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developing world's military spending, and just 1 per cent of that in
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industrialized countries.
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c) That the growing consensus around market economies be accompanied
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by a commitment to a strong investment in people, especially
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children. Simply put, this means that there are things that a free
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market alone cannot do. Governments must combine free-market forces
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with assurances of health and education for all, especially children,
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even in bad economic times. The importance of this proposition is not
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limited to developing countries. As UNlCEF's report also points out,
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the situation of urban and poor children in the United States
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continues to worsen. Child poverty is on the rise, and the real value
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of Aid to Families with Dependant Children has dropped 40 per cent in
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the last 20 years. Even here, in the country that is the world's
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model of a free economy, we are slow to realize that all children do
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not benefit from that system. We must build what amounts to a safety
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net to catch these children before it is too late. There are some
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encouraging signs that the world's leaders may listen this time. The
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World Summit for Children is clearly one of them. The United Nations
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Convention on the Rights of the Child has now been ratified by 107
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countries, and more than 30 others have signed it with the intention
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to ratify.
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Miracle of the decade
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Last October I was at the United Nations with President Carter and
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other dignitaries when UNICEF and the World Health Organization
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certified to the Secretary General that they and the world's
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governments had achieved their goal of universal child immunization
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by 1990. This is the miracle of this decade. This does not mean that
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we have immunized every child or that every country is winning the
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battle with vaccine-preventable diseases. It does mean that 80 per
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cent of the world's one-year olds have been immunized against the six
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major child-killing diseases: measles, tuberculosis, tetanus,
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whooping cough, diphtheria, and polio. This effort is saving some 3
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million young lives each year.
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In 1974, less than 5 per cent of the developing world's children were
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vaccinated. It's difficult to grasp the full meaning of these
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successes until you've looked into the eyes of these children who can
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too often be numbers. Rather than share with you the horrors I've
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witnessed, I prefer to remind you of how easy it is to reach out and
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help these children. There has never been a better opportunity to
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give our children the future they deserve. We have low-cost
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technologies like immunization and oral rehydration therapy. We have
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ample resources made available due to the end of the Cold War, and we
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have the commitment of the world's leaders. What remains is for us to
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change our attitudes as a society, to build a movement for children,
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and to ensure that the promises of the World Summit for Children are
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kept.
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Twenty years ago, few people thought about recycling their
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newspapers, few people worried about the effect of hair spray on the
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ozone layer, few people questioned the amount of pollution their cars
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were spewing into the atmosphere, but slowly and effectively the
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environmentalists in this country and around the world built a
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movement that could not be ignored, and they have brought about a
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fundamental change in the way we live our lives and the way we see
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our planet. We have taken responsibility for our neglect. So too must
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we take responsibility for the neglect of our children. So too must
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we effect a basic change in our priorities and concerns. We must
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resolve ourselves as a community to put the needs of children first
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in war and in peace, in good times and in bad.
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So today, I speak for children who can't speak for themselves,
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children who are going blind from lack of vitamins, children who are
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slowly being mutilated by polio, children who are wasting away in so
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many ways from lack of water. I speak for the estimated 100 million
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street children in this world, who have no choice but to leave home
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in order to survive, who have absolutely nothing but their courage,
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their smiles, their wits, and their dreams; for children who have no
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enemies, yet are invariably the first tiny victims of war, wars that
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are being waged through terror, intimidation, and massacre; for
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children who are therefore growing up surrounded by the horrors of
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violence; for the hundreds of thousands that are refugees; and for
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the rapidly increasing number of children suffering from or orphaned
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by AIDS.
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The great task ahead
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The task that lies ahead for UNICEF is ever great, whether it's
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repatriating millions of children in Africa or Asia, or teaching
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children how to play who only have learned how to kill. Children are
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our most vital resource, our hope for the future. Until they can be
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assured of not only physically surviving the first fragile years of
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life, but are free of emotional, social, and physical abuse, it's
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impossible to envisage a world that is free of tension and violence.
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It is up to us to make it possible. Charles Dickens wrote: "In their
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little world, in which children have their existence, nothing is so
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finely perceived and so finely felt as injustice" injustice which we
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can avoid by giving more of ourselves. Yet we often hesitate in the
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face of such apocalyptic tragedy. Why, when the way and low-cost
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means are in place to safeguard and protect these children? It is for
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leaders, parents, and young people - young people who have the purity
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of heart which sometimes age tends to obscure - to remember their own
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childhood and come to the rescue of those who start life against such
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heavy odds. Simply because they are children, every child has the
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right to health, to education, to protection, to tenderness, to life.
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Interview with Maitreya's associate
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Two journalists, working independently, regularly contribute articles
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to Share International based on interviews with one of Maitreya's close
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associates. This month we received a contribution from Brian James.
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The whole world is becoming bankrupt
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by Brian James
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29 May 1992
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World Collapse - It is not only large financial institutions which are
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tumbling into bankruptcy, the whole world is becoming bankrupt - mentally
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and spiritually, said Maitreya's associate. The world is going through a
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huge crisis and all the medicines have been tried and failed. Maitreya
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says that the tumour has got to burst open before the healing can begin,
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he said.
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The world is in such a chaotic state that it could happen at any time.
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The politicians and the generals can do nothing to stop it - everything
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they have tried to avert disaster has failed.
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The Tokyo Stock Market has been turned by the politicians and
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businessmen into a giant monster serving only a culture of greed. Now it
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is crashing like everything else. Even the United Nations is being forced
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to serve the interests of the strong and the greedy. Only charitable
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institutions, like Oxfam, are caring for the weak and the needy;
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governments are too caught up in killing and destroying.
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Scientists have become like witches - brewing up new creatures through
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genetic experiments to make money.
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Crime is on the increase throughout the Western world. Look at the faces
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of the politicians, they have no sparkle. What is happening is beyond
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their comprehension. The world is like a volcano waiting to erupt - in
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fact it is only a matter of time before it bursts open. America - The
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disintegration that is taking place in the former Soviet Union is now
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happening in America. The Los Angeles riots are not an isolated outburst.
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Every state is crumbling and it is worsening day by day, said the
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associate.
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The states are desperately turning to the Federal Government for aid,
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but it is not forthcoming. The associate claimed that America was
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suffering in retribution for that country's indiscriminate bombing of
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Iraq.
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Britain - This country faces the same disintegration as America. Are
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the people happy? No, there is no happiness here, there is so much
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friction and confusion, said the associate. There is going to be a
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massive revolt as people take to the streets and demand action to bring
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back harmony and justice. Not even the police or the military will be
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able to control it. Japan - The Japanese are sitting on a time bomb.
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The destruction would be far worse than in any other Western country,
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said the associate. Yugoslavia - Why didn't the American, British and
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other Western powers send in military forces to stop the Yugoslavian army
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from slaughtering innocent people? It is because they could not see any
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gain in doing so, unlike their need to protect their oil interests in
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Kuwait. They only evaluate humanity on a material level, said the
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associate.
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QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
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by Benjamin Creme
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Q. I should be more than interested to know whether, following the
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report of the appearance of Maitreya in Nairobi in 1988, further
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appearances have been reported in other parts of the world.
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A. As regular readers of Share International will know, Maitreya has
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made, since June 1988 in Nairobi, a series of appearances in like manner
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_ that is, appearing (and disappearing) before large (until now, orthodox
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Christian) gatherings in different parts of the world, on which we still
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await media comment and reaction. These have been, so far: September
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1991, Mexico City; January 1992, Mexico City; 1 March 1992, Moscow; 22
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March 1992, Leipzig, Germany; 5 April 1992, Hanover, Germany; 26 April
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1992, D*sseldorf, Germany; and 24 May 1992 in Switzerland. These
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appearances will continue until media investigate and report on the
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phenomenon.
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As my Master reveals in His article in this [printed] issue of Share
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International, they are being accompanied by mysterious and miraculous
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events which have yet to reach the ears of the general public. Already,
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at Tlacote, not far from Mexico City, a spring of water has surfaced with
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amazing healing properties. Similar manifestations will be found in due
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course, near the cities at which Maitreya has appeared - further signs of
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His presence.
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Q. (1) There are plans for a major international Christian festival
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in Birmingham, UK, featuring Reinhard Bonnke, one of the world's leading
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evangelists. Crowds of up to 35,000 are expected to attend the meetings
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at the end of July. Is this the type of gathering at which Maitreya would
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make an appearance? (2) Has He made such an appearance at a gathering at
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all in England?
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A. (1) These meetings in Birmingham in July might well seem ideal
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opportunities for Maitreya to appear before large gatherings of people
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with, most probably, media coverage as well. We can be sure, too, that
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Maitreya is not unaware of this fact. However, it is my information that
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He has no plans to appear there. Working strictly within the Law
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governing our free will (which conditions the pace of His emergence), His
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aims at present are less ambitious: so far, apart from Nairobi in June
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1988, He has been appearing to groups of between 500 and 900 people.
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However, with Maitreya, everything is fluid and mobile, and, if
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circumstances permitted (due to humanity's action for the better), I have
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no doubt He would avail Himself of wider opportunities to make His
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presence known in this way.
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(2) To Christian groups, no; but since 1977, He has spoken to large
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audiences within the Asian community, not, however, appearing and
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disappearing but in the ordinary way.
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Q. Is Maitreya 'in on' the "One World Government" of President Bush
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and the infamous "Tri-Lateralists"? I pray that the two are not the same.
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A. President Bush's vision of a "New World Order" and "One World
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Government" envisages an order in which the US, and therefore capitalism,
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dominates and celebrates its triumph over a defunct communist ideology.
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As I understand it, this is certainly not consistent with Maitreya's
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predictions of a new political process (neither capitalism nor communism)
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in which the voice and will of the peoples of the world are given
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expression; in which consensus rather than confrontation and competition
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will be the hallmarks; and in which a new political/economic structure -
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Democratic Socialism or Social Democracy, symbolized by the reunification
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of East and West Germany - will become the norm throughout the world.
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Q. Could you give the point in evolution and ray structure of the
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science fiction writer Isaac Asimov (1920 -1992)?
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A. Soul 3; Personality 4, sub-ray 6; Mental 7, sub-ray 3; Astral 4,
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sub-ray 6; Physical 3, sub-ray 7. He was 1.6 degrees initiate.
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Q. Was Rasputin overshadowed by any of the Masters? If so, were they
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trying to bring about reforms to defuse an explosive situation which led
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to the downfall of the Tsars and the ruling aristocracy?
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A. No.
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Q. In one of your books you say that the astral is only an
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illusionary level of consciousness. I don't quite understand that.
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A. The astral planes, the emotional/astral planes, exist as energy. The
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function of our astral-emotional body is to act as a physical-plane
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expression or vehicle for 'buddhi'. Buddhi is the second of the three
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planes of the spiritual triad. The nature of atman, of the Self, is
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spiritual will, spiritual love/wisdom and spiritual intelligence, and
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these are reflected in the soul as atma, buddhi and manas. They all need
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a vehicle, and the vehicle for buddhi (love/wisdom or group
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consciousness, - intuition, group awareness) is the purified
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astral/emotional body in the advanced individual, particularly, of
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course, in a Master.
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The average individual is still caught up in the desire, rather than the
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spiritual, principle. Desire governs the function of the personality and
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the vehicles of the personality (the physical body, the astral-emotional
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body and the mental body); but the physical body purified, the
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astral/emotional body purified, and the mental body purified eventually
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become the vehicles for atma, buddhi and manas. Until that point is
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reached the person is swept along by the illusions of the astral plane
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which are created by the thoughtform-making process of humanity.
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We have a physical body with an etheric sheath. The physical body dies
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and is put in the ground or burned, but the etheric counterpart of that
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body is a sheath which, normally within three days, dissipates and
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||
returns to the ocean of etheric matter which surrounds us all. We are
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then left in our astral sheath in which we exist for a shorter or longer
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time on one or other of the seven astral planes (hopefully the higher
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planes, because the lower are terrible). The more advanced a person is
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||
the more he or she will be on the higher planes, and the less time will
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||
be spent on these planes.
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On the astral planes there are 'facsimiles' of various Masters - the
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Masters DK, Morya, Koot Hoomi, Serapis, Jesus, Hilarion and various other
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Masters, created, as astral thoughtforms, by humanity. There are many
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mediumistic, astrally sensitive individuals who 'receive' from these
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'facsimiles' so-called 'teachings from the Masters' which are more or
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less erroneous.
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Originally, the teachings came from the real Masters through people like
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Alice Bailey, Eleanor Roerich, Helena Blavatsky, and which are reflected
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||
back on to the astral planes by the disciples of the world. They are then
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||
reflected back again through the astral sensitives with all the
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||
distortions of the astral planes - the planes of distortion. It is like
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||
what happens in dreams. Can you believe what happens in your dreams? The
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astral planes are your dreams because your dreams happen on the astral
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||
plane, are the result of the faculty of the lower mind during light sleep
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||
- in deep sleep there is no dreaming - to create astral thoughtforms.
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This activity of the lower mind goes on and on, the most fantastic things
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happen. Then you wake up. The astral planes are as real as your dreams;
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that is what I mean by the unreality of the astral planes.
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||
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Q. How important is diet - the eating of dairy or vegetable products,
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for example - in the pursuit of perfection?
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||
A. It depends at what stage one is. For those coming up to the first
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||
initiation, vegetarianism is usually a requirement, and at that stage
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||
people usually automatically become vegetarian. They know, because as you
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come towards the first initiation the soul prompts you.
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||
|
||
The first initiation becomes possible when you have made contact with
|
||
your soul. For long ages the soul is not the slightest bit interested in
|
||
its vehicle, its reflection, the man or woman in these successive
|
||
incarnations. The person is so removed from the soul, so cut off from it,
|
||
that there is nothing the soul can do, but eventually, as it is
|
||
approaching the first initiation - say, two or three lives before the
|
||
first initiation - the soul sees that things are beginning to happen; its
|
||
reflection is beginning to respond. It stimulates its vehicles and begins
|
||
to build the 'antahkarana', a column of light from the soul to the
|
||
person, and it introduces the person to meditation of some kind.
|
||
|
||
Meditation is a more or less scientific method (depending on the
|
||
meditation) of coming into contact with the soul and eventually becoming
|
||
at-one with it. So the soul brings the person to meditation, and, more
|
||
and more, pours its energy into the person, on all planes - physical,
|
||
astral/ emotional, and mental. It 'grips' its vehicle in this way, while
|
||
the person meditating is building this antahkarana up towards the soul.
|
||
He becomes more idealistic, more aspiring, because the soul is pouring
|
||
down what we call the Christ Principle - the soul is the Christ
|
||
Principle, the principle of consciousness. This stimulates the aspiration
|
||
towards a higher life, and the person's predilections, their interests,
|
||
begin to change. They usually become more serious, less wasteful of time,
|
||
they get bored with earlier pursuits and are attracted to a deeper, more
|
||
meaningful aspect, coming from the soul. They begin to relate to
|
||
humanity in a broader sense, to feel responsibility, and they begin to
|
||
want to serve the world in some way. They usually think they should
|
||
become vegetarian and eventually it becomes a must for them. This is
|
||
because the first initiation is the result of the control of the physical
|
||
elemental.
|
||
|
||
All of our bodies are made up of the life activity of tiny little
|
||
devic, or angelic, lives. This body that we think is solid physical is
|
||
made up of the activity of little devas, little angels, tiny little devic
|
||
lives, and they control us or we control them - it is one or the other.
|
||
|
||
The first initiation is only possible when we control their activity
|
||
rather than they ours. The second initiation is only possible when we
|
||
control the activity of the astral devas, the third when we control the
|
||
activity of the mental devas. These three vehicles of the soul on the
|
||
physical plane have to be controlled. The readiness for the first
|
||
initiation demonstrates when we have a good degree of control over the
|
||
activity of the physical body _ not too much food, not too much sex, not
|
||
too much drink, not too much of anything; it does not have to be a
|
||
totally vegetarian diet. There are fanatics around in every sphere but
|
||
you will find that there is always a purification of the diet which leads
|
||
to purification of the body.
|
||
|
||
Then for the second initiation you begin to work on the control of the
|
||
astral/emotional reactions to life. The soul through the mental body
|
||
controls the astral body, and then the soul through the mental body
|
||
controls the mental body itself.
|
||
Once these three controls are established, the three initiations can
|
||
take place and you are divine. At the fourth initiation the soul is no
|
||
longer needed _ it is the divine intermediary between the spark of God
|
||
and the man or woman on the physical plane. The vehicle for the soul, the
|
||
body of the soul on the soul plane (called the causal body), is shattered
|
||
and the soul is reabsorbed into the divine Self, the spark of God. The
|
||
man then stands as a living God, a divine God-man. Until the third
|
||
initiation is taken you are potentially divine but not yet totally
|
||
divine.
|
||
So it is to do with the impulse of the soul that one comes into
|
||
vegetarianism. Once you have proved that you have control, the need for
|
||
control does not become so marked. The habit goes on but it is not
|
||
essential.
|
||
|
||
Q. Do animals have souls?
|
||
A. Individually, no. Animals are expressions of a group soul _ there is
|
||
the soul which is 'cat', or 'dog', or 'horse' or 'camel', but they do not
|
||
have individualized souls in the way humans have. The individualization
|
||
of humanity occurred, according to esoteric teachings, no less than
|
||
18-and-a-half million years ago.
|
||
|
||
Q. Who taught you so that you have reached the stage where you can
|
||
meet a Master? This is my first meeting here and I feel very frustrated
|
||
because there seems a lot to know and a lot to learn. Why can't Share
|
||
International have a sort of Entity that people who want to know and
|
||
learn can learn from?
|
||
A. You mean why don't we start a school? A school would require a group
|
||
of teachers who know at least a page more than others do in order to
|
||
teach - and there are groups all over the world who do nothing else. Our
|
||
task is not to set up a school but to make known that the Christ is in
|
||
the world, that the Masters are returning - there are now 14 Masters in
|
||
the world besides Maitreya - and to prepare the way, to create the
|
||
climate of hope, of expectancy, for His coming, so that He can enter our
|
||
lives without infringing human free will. That is a full-time job - just
|
||
to publish Share International is pretty-well a full-time job. To travel
|
||
around the world as I do is almost a full-time job. Besides that I am a
|
||
painter, I am married, have two children, I have to sleep occasionally, I
|
||
have to eat sometimes ... you are asking the impossible!
|
||
|
||
Let me just say, if you want to know about the esoteric teachings in the
|
||
academic sense, read the Alice Bailey teachings. There are 24 books, they
|
||
are available in all the esoteric bookshops. The first was published in
|
||
1922. Start with these, with Initiation Human and Solar and go on. No one
|
||
need be short of something to read.
|
||
|
||
Q. Could you please give the ray-structure and point in evolution of
|
||
the late healer and medium Estelle Roberts?
|
||
A. Soul 2; personality 6, sub-ray 4; mental body 6, sub-ray 4; astral
|
||
body 6, sub-ray 2; physical body 3, sub-ray 3. She was 1.2 degrees
|
||
initiate.
|
||
|
||
Q. It is thought that the late Vicky Wall, who was given the formulas
|
||
for the soul colour therapy 'Aura-Soma' through direct channelling, has
|
||
returned to Sirius. Could you confirm this please?
|
||
A. I must confess that this question makes me smile. Sirius is the
|
||
alter-ego of this Solar system and only Masters of the fifth initiation
|
||
or higher may _ if it is Their destiny _ go to Sirius and, by the same
|
||
token, only Avatars can come from Sirius to this planet.
|
||
The late Vicky Wall had not yet taken the first initiation; her point in
|
||
evolution was 0.8. So much for "direct channelling", 99.999 per cent of
|
||
which comes from the astral planes _ the planes of illusion.
|
||
|
||
Q. Can you please give the ray structure and point in evolution of
|
||
the late German philosopher Martin Heidegger?
|
||
A. Soul 4; Personality 3, sub-ray 7; mental body 4, sub-ray 6; astral
|
||
body 6, sub-ray 2; physical body 7, sub-ray 3. He was 1.7 degrees
|
||
initiate.
|
||
|
||
Q. Please give the ray structure and point in evolution of the late
|
||
Arthur Rubinstein, the famous pianist.
|
||
A. Soul 2; Personality 4, sub-ray 4; mental body 4, sub-ray 6; astral
|
||
body 6, sub-ray 6; physical body 7, sub-ray 7. He was 1.75 degrees
|
||
initiate.
|
||
|
||
Benjamin Creme _ meetings and tours
|
||
|
||
UK _ Benjamin Creme lectures at Friends' Meeting
|
||
House, Euston Road, London NW1: Thursday 16 July,
|
||
Thursday 6 August. Lectures begin 7 pm; doors
|
||
open/literature available 6.30 pm. Enquiries: %
|
||
071-485 1739 or fax/answerphone: % 071-482 1113.
|
||
Canada _ Vancouver BC: Lecture, 26 June;
|
||
Meditation, 27 June
|
||
Enquiries: % 604-736-8272
|
||
USA _ Los Angeles: Lecture, 30 June; Meditation, 1
|
||
July
|
||
Enquiries: % 818-785-6300
|
||
Mexico _ Mexico City: Lecture, 4 July; Meditation,
|
||
5 July
|
||
USA _ San Francisco: Meditation, 8 July; Lecture, 9
|
||
July
|
||
Enquiries: % 510-841-3738
|
||
Tara Center Network Conference, 10-12 July.
|
||
Holland _ Lecture, 17 September; International
|
||
Transmission Meditation Conference, September
|
||
18-20. Enquiries: PO Box 41877, 1009 DB Amsterdam.
|
||
Germany _ Munich: 8-9 October. Enquiries: %
|
||
089-12332522; Hamburg: 10-11 October. Enquiries: %
|
||
040-5552216.
|
||
Switzerland _ Geneva: 24-25 October. Enquiries: %
|
||
021-369984. Zurich: 26-27 October.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Islamic fundamentalism today
|
||
by Aziz-ud-Din Ahmad
|
||
|
||
It was peculiar to see Afghan pakols - the woolen caps typically worn in
|
||
Peshawar and Kabul - on the heads of protesters in the capital of
|
||
Algeria. Stranger still, a few weeks later, to hear that the "Afghans"
|
||
had attacked the city's police. Algeria had become the latest country to
|
||
be rocked by Islamic Fundamentalism, a movement that today haunts the
|
||
entire Muslim world from Morocco to Indonesia. Like the ghost of Hamlet's
|
||
father, it is here, there and everywhere.
|
||
|
||
Its force, however, differs from region to region and from country to
|
||
country. Somewhere a ripple, at other places a minor current, it has
|
||
assumed the form of a storm at least in two countries. The storm centre
|
||
is the Middle East, where fundamentalism achieved its first victory when
|
||
the Iranian clergy overthrew Shah Reza Pahlavi in violent revolution.
|
||
Iran became a beacon of light for fundamentalists in Muslim countries the
|
||
world over. Here was a country bravely introducing a system of laws,
|
||
based on the Koran, which many Westernized Muslims had regarded as
|
||
impractical. It had gone even further: it challenged the two superpowers
|
||
simultaneously. Could this system bring prosperity and enlightenment to
|
||
the downtrodden Muslim masses of the Third World? Could it help them
|
||
achieve a respectable place among the nations of the world, denied to
|
||
them since the overthrow of the Abbasids in Baghdad and the Ummawis in
|
||
Andalusia?
|
||
|
||
Not only fundamentalists but many other Muslims looked towards
|
||
revolutionary Iran in wonder and awe. Islamic fundamentalist parties
|
||
languishing in neighboring countries received moral encouragement and
|
||
were revitalized. Egypt came first, with the Ikhwan, or Muslim
|
||
Brotherhood, goaded to new activity by the Iranian example. Taking full
|
||
benefit of the freedoms allowed to them by the government of Hosny
|
||
Mubarak, they plunged into the political arena, gaining (in alliance with
|
||
the socialist Labour Party) 60 National Assembly seats in the 1987
|
||
elections.A similar feat was performed by the Ikhwan in Jordan in the
|
||
1989 elections. In the kingdom's first general elections in 22 years, the
|
||
fundamentalists garnered no less than 20 seats in a house consisting of
|
||
only 80 deputies. In alliance with 12 other like-minded members, this
|
||
gave them the largest single voting bloc. While participating in
|
||
elections in Egypt and Jordan, the Ikhwan have by no means confined
|
||
themselves to democratic methods alone.
|
||
|
||
In neighboring Sudan, they fully supported the military led by Brigadier
|
||
Omar Hasan Ahmad al-Bashir, who overthrew Sadiq al-Mahdi. As reward, they
|
||
were the only political group represented in the new cabinet. Islamic
|
||
fundamentalism is also on the rise in the Arab Meghreb, which might well
|
||
become its second stronghold after the Middle East. 1990 was marked by
|
||
outbursts of fundamentalism in both Tunisia and Morocco. Violent
|
||
protests by fundamentalists in that year led to arrests in Tunisia. The
|
||
clash with police apparently involved a protest at the government's
|
||
handling of flood victims in the country. The militancy, however, was an
|
||
expression of the new spirit with which fundamentalism has been animated
|
||
in recent years. In Morocco that same year about 2,000 fundamentalists
|
||
were beaten and arrested when they took to the streets demanding the
|
||
release of six jailed leaders.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Algeria, however, has emerged as the stronghold of the resurgent
|
||
fundamentalism in the Arab Maghreb. Strange for a country where Western
|
||
culture has left widespread impact. Unlike Iran, where most people do not
|
||
know any European language, virtually all Algerians speak French as a
|
||
second language. Half the country gets its daily news from the French
|
||
media, while 4 million Algerians live abroad in Italy, Spain or France,
|
||
frequently traveling back and forth. Fundamentalists won the Algerian
|
||
municipal elections over a year ago and were on the verge of coming to
|
||
power through a thumping electoral victory in the recent general
|
||
elections when they were stopped short by the military (which has in fact
|
||
ruled Algeria since its liberation in 1962). The military top brass,
|
||
trained in elite French military schools, were perhaps afraid of what
|
||
fundamentalism might do to their lifestyles. After initially showing
|
||
restraint, the fundamentalists are now on the war path against the army,
|
||
which they regard as a usurper of power. The Islamic Salvation Front
|
||
(FIS) is demanding that the election results be respected and that the
|
||
current ruling council bow to the will of people. It is still too early
|
||
to predict the outcome of that confrontation.
|
||
|
||
In the Asia-Pacific region, meanwhile, the cradle of the Islamic
|
||
fundamentalist movement is Indonesia. The former Dar-ul-Islam and the
|
||
Masjumi Party have been replaced by the new fundamentalist Partai
|
||
Persatuan Pembongan, or PPP. In Indonesia, fundamentalists have tried a
|
||
number of methods to come to power, from participation in elections to
|
||
insurrection. Targeted by Soekarno, against whom they had never taken
|
||
arms, the fundamentalists had hoped for better treatment from Suharto,
|
||
especially as they had collaborated with him in the massacre of
|
||
Indonesian communists. But Suharto was slow in allowing them to function.
|
||
Nevertheless, with the Communist Party -- the second-largest in Asia
|
||
after China's--banned and its rank and file killed and jailed in
|
||
thousands, the Indonesian PPP has emerged as the second-largest party in
|
||
the Parliament. The ruling Golkar Party got 299 seats in the 1987
|
||
elections, while the PPP won 61 seats and the PDI, the pro-Soekarno
|
||
party, lagged behind with no more than 40 seats.
|
||
|
||
There is also an Islamic party in Malaysia, which calls itself Partie
|
||
Islam Pas, or PAS for short. Though the party has little impact on
|
||
national politics, it has formed government in one of the provinces in
|
||
coalition with the ruling party of Mohatir Mohammad. In Pakistan, Jama
|
||
at-e-Islami represents the fundamentalist trend. Formed in 1941, it has
|
||
enjoyed little electoral strength, being more of a cadre party than a
|
||
mass party. Despite its discipline and a formidable propaganda machine,
|
||
it could only bag four seats in the 1970 national elections. Its
|
||
performance in 1988 and 1990 was better because of the electoral alliance
|
||
it made with the Muslim League and others, but it stands as nothing
|
||
compared to the other parties in the country.
|
||
|
||
The Soviet entry in Afghanistan revived the fundamentalist trend that had
|
||
remained latent in that country before then. The mullah had performed
|
||
important social functions in traditional Pukhtun society but had never
|
||
been recognized as a ruler. After the Afghan revolution, however,
|
||
fundamentalism was encouraged as a counterpoise to communist ideology.
|
||
The material aid from the Middle East strengthened the trend., And as
|
||
Afghan nationalism was anathema to the establishment in Pakistan,
|
||
important sections of it gave important assistance to the fundamentalist
|
||
parties.
|
||
|
||
|
||
What is the social base of fundamentalism in the Muslim world today?
|
||
Poverty and illiteracy, maintain some writers. But is this the real
|
||
reason? If this were so, Pakistan should be the first stronghold of
|
||
fundamentalism because it is at the bottom of the list among Muslim
|
||
countries in these benchmarks, just above Sudan and Afghanistan. Iran,
|
||
where fundamentalism continues to thrive, had a per capita income of
|
||
$2,160 and a literacy rate of 48 per cent in 1977-- that is, on the eve
|
||
of the Iranian revolution--compared to $200 per capita income and a
|
||
literacy rate of 24 per cent for Pakistan that same year. Algeria, Egypt,
|
||
Jordan, Morocco, Tunisia and Indonesia have per capita incomes of $1,951,
|
||
$686, $551, $800, $884 and $560 respectively, and literacy rates of 46,
|
||
44, 58, 24, 62 and 64 per cent. Only Sudan and Afghanistan come near
|
||
Pakistan, with respective per capita incomes of $370 and $168 and
|
||
literacy rates of 20 and 10 per cent.
|
||
|
||
In Muslim countries, it is clear, fundamentalism does not attract the
|
||
poor and uneducated alone. It appeals to a section of the educated youth
|
||
as well, who are drawn towards it as an alternative political system in
|
||
post-colonial societies ruled by corrupt and inefficient political elites
|
||
tied to the West. Most of the Muslim countries suffered under colonial
|
||
rule and the masses expected a better dispensation after liberation from
|
||
the foreign yoke. They grew disillusioned, however, as decades after
|
||
liberation the people continued to suffer under the unscrupulous and
|
||
corrupt generals, bureaucrats and politicians. In these countries, where
|
||
common people did not often have clean potable water to drink, the ruling
|
||
elite spent its ill-gotten wealth on costly luxuries imported from abroad
|
||
and on highly ostentatious living. Not only was this true of the ruling
|
||
elites tied to the bourgeois West but also of the nationalist or
|
||
socialist elites aligned with the former Soviet bloc.
|
||
|
||
This negligence provided more than enough material to the
|
||
fundamentalists, who simultaneously condemned capitalism, nationalism and
|
||
socialism--along with the big and the small Satan supporting them. The
|
||
puritanical life style of many fundamentalist leaders along with their
|
||
stress on honesty and otherworldliness, has sometimes led people to think
|
||
that they would be able to end the corruption and dishonesty if they were
|
||
in power.
|
||
|
||
What is the social base of fundamentalism in the Muslim world today?
|
||
Most of the Muslim countries suffered under colonial rule and the masses
|
||
expected a better dispensation after liberation from the foreign yoke.
|
||
They grew disillusioned, however, as decades after liberation the people
|
||
continued to suffer under the unscrupulous and corrupt generals,
|
||
bureaucr... [A portion of text is missing.]
|
||
|
||
|
||
[End of File]
|
||
### |