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Freeing the future from the grip of the past: Caux's history made it the ideal place for a high-level symposium on reconciliation.


A Frenchwoman describes the liberation from bitterness towards Germany that her mother found at Caux, 50 years ago; a German recalls what it meant to meet people who had suffered `under us Germans' and were prepared to forgive.

A former Tunisian diplomat, who first came to Caux 43 years ago at the age of 27, speaks of the `alchemy on this inspired mountain'. `This is the place I dropped a big bundle of anger and hatred,' a Cambodian woman, who lost her husband in the killing fields, says simply.

All four of these people, speaking at the symposium on `An agenda for reconciliation towards the 21st century,' were recalling moments of truth which had led them on to play a part in the reconstruction, liberation or reconciliation of their countries. It was experiences like theirs which inspired Japan's National Institute for Research Advancement The National Institute for Research Advancement (NIRA) is a Japanese independent policy research body based in Tokyo founded in 1974 under the National Institute for Research Advancement Act.  (NIRA NIRA National Institute for Research Advancement (Japan)
NIRA National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association
NIRA National Industrial Recovery Act of 1933
NIRA National Import Racing Association
) and the Center for Strategic and International Studies The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) is a Washington, D.C.-based foreign policy think tank. The center was founded in 1964 by Admiral Arleigh Burke and historian David Manker Abshire, originally as part of Georgetown University.  (CSIS Noun 1. CSIS - Canada's main foreign intelligence agency that gathers and analyzes information to provide security intelligence for the Canadian government
Canadian Security Intelligence Service
) in Washington DC to join MRA MRA Medical Record Administrator.
MRA Magnetic resonance angiography, see MR angiography
 in hosting the symposium in August. The symposium approached its theme from an academic as well as a practical angle and drew politicians, diplomats, peace workers and academics from all over the world.

It took as its starting point Noun 1. starting point - earliest limiting point
terminus a quo

commencement, get-go, offset, outset, showtime, starting time, beginning, start, kickoff, first - the time at which something is supposed to begin; "they got an early start"; "she knew from the
 the post-War reconciliation of France and Germany, which was facilitated by heart-to-heart encounters between the former enemies, many of them at Caux. `The spirit of Caux has found full and lasting expression in efforts to build a new, united Europe, free from the mutual suspicion and enmity of the past,' stated a message from the Secretary-General of the United Nations, Boutros Boutros-Ghali Boutros Boutros-Ghali (Arabic: بطرس بطرس غالي Coptic: BOYTPOC BOYTPOC ΓΑΛΗ) (born November 14, 1922) is an Egyptian diplomat who was the sixth Secretary-General of the United Nations from . The message was read to the symposium by Jose Ayala-Lasso, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights.

When Frank Buchman asked the French in 1946, `How can you rebuild Europe without the Germans?', he had provided the `perspective of the future' as a reason to forgive, said Ambassador Jean-Marc Boulgaris, who represented the Swiss Foreign Minister at the opening. `The future turned the present upside down and freed it from the grip of the past.' Caux's role, was to be such `a place of the future'. Justice, he stressed, was a essential component of reconciliation.

Next day experts from France, Germany and Switzerland made presentations on the theme of `France and Germany--the paradigm experience'. `Fifty years of peace between France and Germany is very unusual in the history of our world,' Henri Menudier, Professor of German Civilization at the New Sorbonne, reminded the packed auditorium.

The symposium was attended by Tsutomu Hata Tsutomu Hata (羽田 孜 Hata Tsutomu, b. August 24, 1935) is a Japanese politician and was the 80th Prime Minister of Japan for several weeks in 1994. , who was Prime Minister of Japan in 1994, and two other Japanese Diet Members. Hata spoke of Caux's role in preparing the way `for Japan to be reconciled with the world family after World War II'. He described the part people inspired by MRA had played in post-war Japan's recovery--including their influence on labour relations labour relations (US), labor relations nplrelations fpl dans l'entreprise

labour relations labour nplBeziehungen pl
, the move from confrontational to kyosei (working together) politics, and Prime Minister Kishi's apologies for atrocities in World War II.

`Since then, Japan seems to have forgotten her own history and behaved as if her only concern was her own peace and prosperity,' Hata continued. `We must face our past history and put right what is wrong.' He apologized `deeply for the indescribable sufferings and wounds Japan caused during the war' and proposed measures to repair the past.

Hata called for an international conference on conflict resolution to be held in Hiroshima in 2000. `Not only do we need to deal with corruption, injustice and hate, but we also need to raise living standards living standards nplnivel msg de vida

living standards living nplniveau m de vie

living standards living npl
, improve human rights and encourage democracy, if we want to solve conflicts,' he said.

For Yukio Hatoyama Yukio Hatoyama (鳩山由紀夫 Hatoyama Yukio) (born 2 February 1947 in Tokyo) is a politician of the Democratic Party of Japan representing the 18th district of Tokyo in the House of Representatives. , Secretary General of the New Party Sakigake The New Party Sakigake (新党さきがけ Shinto Sakigake) was a Japanese political party that broke away from the Liberal Democratic Party on June 22, 1993. The party was created by Masayoshi Takemura. , Japan's contribution in the future lay in the realm of preventive diplomacy Diplomatic actions taken in advance of a predictable crisis to prevent or limit violence.  and in development aid. `We cannot and should not play a role in peace-keeping military operations This is a list of missions, operations, and projects. Missions in support of other missions are not listed independently. World War I
''See also List of military engagements of World War I
  • Albion (1917)
,' he said. `But we should play one in a non-military way.'

In a masterly analysis of Japan's post-war history, Masahide Shibusawa, the Director of the Tokyo Jyogakkan College, pointed out that while Japanese political leaders had expressed regret for their country's aggression, this `had not led to nationwide acceptance of moral responsibility for past crimes'. The statements of some leaders `amounted to a denial of the past'. While Germany had paid an estimated $70 billion in reparations reparations, payments or other compensation offered as an indemnity for loss or damage. Although the term is used to cover payments made to Holocaust survivors and to Japanese Americans interned during World War II in so-called relocation camps (and used as well to  after the war, Japan had paid a mere $7 billion.

In particular, Japan had largely ignored the need for reconciliation with her Asian neighbours. Shibusawa cited a number of reasons for this--Asia's low standing on the world stage at the time; the Cold War which had engulfed China and Korea, two of Japan's main victims; the Allies' fear that any focus on Japanese colonialism and aggression might stir up nationalist feeling in their own Asian colonies; and Japan's `penchant to despise and underrate Asian nations', which stemmed from her pre-war obsession with catching up with the West.

Shibusawa's exposition, and that of the Japanese politicians, made a deep impression on those attending the conference. A former British serviceman responded with an account of his visit to Hiroshima with a group of war veterans. He apologized for his country's pre-war arrogance which `drove Japan into a corner'.

The last meeting of the conference fell on 15 August, the day on which in 1945 Japan accepted defeat and Korea gained independence. Keisuke Nakayama, Director of the Asia Center, Odawara, described how he had been in tears early that morning as he reflected on his country's past. Later, in a moving moment of reconciliation, one of the Koreans present called him back to the platform to shake hands to perform the customary act of civility by clasping and moving hands, as an expression of greeting, farewell, good will, agreement, etc.

See also: Shake
.

The symposium also examined the challenges facing peacemakers This article is about the pacifist organization. For other meanings, see Peacemaker (disambiguation).
Peacemakers was an American pacifist organization.
 today. Cornelio Sommaruga, President of the International Committee of the Red Cross
"ICRC" redirects here. For other uses, see ICRC (disambiguation).


The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) is a private humanitarian institution based in Geneva, Switzerland.
, told the conference that whereas 95 per cent of those killed in World War I were soldiers, 90 per cent of those killed in the Lebanese War of 1982 were civilians. `We need less violence on TV, in our streets and in our schools,' he said. `We need more money for food and blankets, and less for bullets and mines.'

`Right now we live in the period of counting our dead, our missing relatives, our destroyed homes, mosques, churches,' Mato Zovkic, Vicar-General of the archdiocese of Sarajevo, Bosnia, told a session on post-Cold War Europe. The minorities in the ethnic cantons of Bosnia would only be safe `if we keep dismantling the hostile mentality in our hearts and in our communities'.

Another session, with speakers from seven African countries, focused on the challenges facing Africa. `In the peace circuit one does not often hear the words reconciliation and healing,' said Bethwel Kiplagat, a former Kenyan High Commissioner to the UK. He spoke of the need for peace-making efforts to touch `the deep underlying causes which are often in the spiritual realm: fear, anger, hatred and revenge'.

Speakers from Ethiopia and Eritrea described their own work for reconciliation. After 30 years of `brutal' war, said Eritrean administrator Osman Ibrahim Shum, `we knew we needed each other and should start on reconciliation'. Mammo Wudneh Mammo Wudneh is a playwright, journalist and Former President of the Ethiopian Writers' Association. He is actively involved as a peacemaker between Ethiopia and Eritrea working on an interfaith committee chaired by Abune Paulos, the Patriarch of the Tewahedo Church. , Chairman of Ethiopia's Writers' Association, spoke of his attempts to change his neighbours' hostility to the Somali and Sudanese refugees in their midst, and to help Ethiopians in the Eritrean capital, Asmara, to live peacefully with their former enemies.

The symposium also examined relations between different faiths. At the opening session, the Venerable Maha Ghosananda, Supreme International Patriarch of Cambodia, spoke of the link between the individual and society. `If I am good to all beings,' he said, `then they learn goodness and are good, in turn, to others. If I am bad, they harbour hatred and resentment and, in turn, pass it on. So if the world is not good, it is because I am not good.'

At another session Hindu, Muslim, Christian and Jewish speakers addressed interfaith relationships. Rajmohan Gandhi Rajmohan Gandhi (1935, New Delhi, India) is a biographer and grandson of Mahatma Gandhi. His maternal grandfather was C.Rajagopalachari Rajaji, the first Indian Governor General of independent India and one of the foremost freedom fighters. , of India's Centre for Policy Research, spoke of the way his life, as a Hindu, had been touched by his country's Muslim community. `My picture of my past or India's past is incomplete without Islam and its adherents,' he said. `My identity is partial without them.'

Abdulaziz Sachedina, Professor of Islamic Studies at the University of Virginia, USA, presented a paper on the Islamic Theology of International Relations. He was followed by Jacqueline Rouge, a former Co-President of the World Conference on Religion and Peace, and Jean Halperin, Professor of Jewish Thought at the University of Fribourg For the German university, see .
The University of Fribourg (French: Université de Fribourg; German: Universität Freiburg) is a university in the city of Fribourg, Switzerland.
, Switzerland. Rouge referred to Christians' failure over two millennia to live up to the `very principle of their religion'--peace and reconciliation.

Workshops--on Ireland, Lebanon, South Africa, the Horn of Africa Horn of Africa, peninsula, NE Africa, opposite the S Arabia Peninsula. Also known as the Somali Peninsula, it encompasses Somalia and E Ethiopia and is the easternmost extension of the continent, separating the Gulf of Aden from the Indian Ocean. , Bougainville, `the wounds of history', and on Japan and Korea--gave peaceworkers from these areas a chance to present the nuts and bolts nuts and bolts
pl.n. Slang
The basic working components or practical aspects: "[proposing]
 of healing and reconstruction. Later a young Japanese woman described how she had run up to one of the Korean speakers at the workshop she attended. `I was shocked to discover how ignorant and uninterested I was about history.'

The final meeting of the session gave the audience a chance to respond to the presentations of the previous days. `In Cambodia I feel isolated,' said a former government minister. `Sometimes there is a lot of scepticism about a rebirth of our country and people. Caux helps me to know that I'm not alone.' He spoke of the trees he could see out of his bedroom window at Caux--the `trees of universal love' and the `tree of pardon, which remains tall in the face of all the winds of life'.

`This place frees you to think of others,' said a politician from El Salvador; an African student said that her faith in her continent's leadership had been revived; a Somali exile said that her `spirit had come alive again'; an Israeli woman spoke of the need to `talk about trust' before talking about territories; a veteran of the South African bush war affirmed his determination to work for reconciliation on his return.

Moments of truth, which, like those of the last 50 years, offer a hope for peace in the years to come.
COPYRIGHT 1996 For A Change
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1996, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Mary Lean
Publication:For A Change
Date:Oct 1, 1996
Words:1670
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