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A Shared Pledge for a More Humane Future: To Eliminate Misery from the Earth
Daisaku Ikeda, president of the Soka Gakkai International (SGI) Buddhist association, has issued his 2015 peace proposal, "A Shared Pledge for a More Humane Future: To Eliminate Misery from the Earth."
In
the proposal, Ikeda welcomes the ambitious scale of the United Nations'
proposed Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which call for putting
an end to poverty "in all its forms everywhere." In the 70th year since
the UN was created, he calls for a return to its founding spirit, as
well as for increased collaboration between the UN and civil society.
In
order to lay the foundations for elimination of the human suffering
caused by poverty and conflict, he stresses a need for the
rehumanization of politics and economics based on a solidarity of
ordinary citizens, for empowerment that enables people to overcome
suffering and for a broadening of the sphere of our friendships and
concern for others as a basis for building peace.
Ikeda
makes specific proposals for protection of the rights of
displaced persons and others living outside of their country of origin
for economic reasons. He suggests including in the SDGs the protection
of the dignity and human rights of all such people, and calls for
regional cooperation toward the empowerment of displaced persons,
particularly in the Asia-Pacific region and the Middle East, building on pioneering initiatives in West Africa.
Regarding the abolition of nuclear weapons, a consistent theme of Ikeda's proposals, he applauds the fact that in October 2014,
a total of 155 countries and territories signed the Joint Statement on
the Humanitarian Consequences of Nuclear Weapons. Over 80% of UN member
states have now clearly stated that nuclear weapons should be never used
under any circumstances.
Ikeda
asserts that while the gulf between the nuclear-weapon states and those
calling for nuclear abolition appears great, there is common ground in
the desire to avoid the horrific outcome of any use of nuclear weapons.
He urges heads of government to attend the 2015 Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) Review Conference and calls on them to
voice there the pledges of their governments to eliminate the danger
posed by nuclear weapons.
Planning is underway for a World Youth Summit for the Abolition of Nuclear Weapons to be held in Hiroshima
in September as a joint initiative of SGI and other NGOs. Ikeda hopes a
youth declaration pledging to end the nuclear age will be adopted,
building momentum in support of a treaty to prohibit nuclear weapons.
In his proposal, Ikeda also calls for increased regional cooperation and youth exchange, specifically urging China, South Korea and Japan to come together to create a regional model for such collaboration.
He
stresses the importance of reviving trilateral China-Korea-Japan
summits and hopes that leaders of the three countries can mark the 70th
anniversary of the end of World War II with a pledge never to go to war
again and regional cooperation in support of the SDGs.
At the third UN World Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction to be held in Sendai, Japan,
in March, Ikeda mentions that SGI will organize a workshop in which
representatives of the three countries will discuss possible regional
cooperation in disaster prevention, relief activities and post-disaster
recovery.
He
also hopes to see the establishment of a China-Korea-Japan youth
partnership through which young people can cooperate in efforts to
realize the SDGs and other trilateral initiatives.
Buddhist philosopher, author and peacebuilder Daisaku Ikeda
(1928 - ), president of the Soka Gakkai International (SGI) lay
Buddhist organization, has issued a peace proposal offering ways forward
in tackling global challenges every year since 1983.
This year marks the 40th anniversary of the founding of SGI in Guam on January 26, 1975.
SGI now links over 12 million people in 192 countries and territories
around the world who practice Nichiren Buddhism and contribute to their
communities. SGI's activities to promote peace, culture and education
are part of the longstanding tradition of Buddhist humanism.
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