Making the most of the new millenium: as the countdown clocks tick their way towards the year 2000, Mary Lean looks at plans to mark a global rite of passage.The people of Fiji are so keen to be first to enter the third Millennium that they have adopted Daylight Saving, so as to pip New Zealand New Zealand (zē`lənd), island country (2005 est. pop. 4,035,000), 104,454 sq mi (270,534 sq km), in the S Pacific Ocean, over 1,000 mi (1,600 km) SE of Australia. The capital is Wellington; the largest city and leading port is Auckland. to the post. After all there are tourist dollars in the tick of the clock that takes us into the 21st century. Purists will tell you that the actual spot where the sun first hits the earth on 1 January 2000 will be somewhere in the Southern Ocean, north of Scott Island Scott Island () is a small uninhabited island of volcanic origin in the Southern Ocean, 505 km northeast of Cape Adare, the northeastern extremity of Victoria Land. It is 370 metres long and 180 m wide, covering an area of 0.4 km². . As it travels on, it will shine down on a bewildering be·wil·der tr.v. be·wil·dered, be·wil·der·ing, be·wil·ders 1. To confuse or befuddle, especially with numerous conflicting situations, objects, or statements. See Synonyms at puzzle. 2. array of monuments to the new Millennium--from a gold-encased capstone on Egypt's great pyramid Great Pyramid, the Cheops’ tomb, built 4,600 years ago, nearly 500 feet high, with bases 755 feet long. [Egypt. Arch.: Brewer Dictionary, 735] See : Wonders, Architectural to a 72-foot-high hourglass hourglass, glass instrument for measuring time, usually consisting of two bulbs united by a narrow neck. One bulb is filled with fine sand that runs through the neck into the other bulb in an hour's time. in Paris, which will dribble its way through 100 tonnes of sand. Dawn's rays will tip the masts of the largest ever international fleet of tall ships, moored off Gisborne, New Zealand
Gisborne (Māori: Tūranga-nui-a-Kiwa) is the name of a unitary authority in New Zealand, being both a region and a district. , and run along the 15,000 kilometres of the newly opened Trans Canada Trail The Trans Canada Trail is a proposed 18,078-kilometre-long trail in Canada. The creation of the trail was announced as part of Canada's 125th anniversary celebrations in 1992. It is expected that when complete, it will be the longest recreational trail in the world. . The sun will lap the sides of Britain's controversial multi-million pound Millennium Dome This article is about the Millennium Dome before its redevelopment and renaming to The O2 in 2005. and light up the humbler--but more useful--achievements of hundreds of thousands of communities who are determined that after the party they will have something concrete by which to remember the year 2000. And, in the light of that new dawn, a number of chickens will come home to roost Home to Roost is a British television sitcom produced by Yorkshire Television. Written by Eric Chappell, it starred John Thaw as Henry Willows and Reece Dinsdale as his 18-year-old son Matthew. . Strikes by the electricians working on the extension of London Underground's Jubilee Line last autumn raised the possibility that even if the Millennium Dome exhibition centre opens on time, nobody will be able to get to it. And no one knows yet whether the frenzied activities of the world's computer buffs will manage to beat the Millennium bug (where computer clocks unable to cope with a new first digit in the year will wind back to 1900, and paralyze par·a·lyze v. To affect with paralysis; cause to be paralytic. hospitals, financial institutions and airlines in the process). The year 2000 may just be a turn of the calendar, a more exciting date--but it has the power to inspire and to generate action. There's certainly a lot of money about. Britain's lottery-funded Millennium Commission has had [pounds sterling] 1.6 billion to distribute, and a large part of it has gone on relatively small-scale local projects from drinking fountains to village halls. By the year 2000 it will have part-funded some 350 of the latter, as well as 250 village greens and over 300 community woods, and helped 100 churches to install or repair their bells so that they can ring in the new Millennium. Myriad other projects have been funded by other organizations--or by local efforts alone. The approach of the Millennium has had a galvanizing galvanizing, process of coating a metal, usually iron or steel, with a protective covering of zinc. Galvanized iron is prepared either by dipping iron, from which rust has been removed by the action of sulfuric acid, into molten zinc so that a thin layer of the zinc effect on the inhabitants
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame. of Red Lodge, an expanding commuter village in Suffolk, England. `It used to be just a small core of 25 people who wanted to do something for the village,' says the Chair of the Parish Council, Bob Burlison. `But now the whole village seems to be waking up.' They have raised the money (with help from the Millennium Commission) for a new state-of-the-art community centre and are clearing an overgrown overgrown said of a part that has not been kept trimmed. overgrown hoof overgrown hooves put unusual stresses on bones and tendons and allow for distortion of the wall and sole. local lake and planning a Millennium garden as well. `The year 2000 seems to be the trigger,' says Burlison. `People feel they should be doing something to mark the Millennium.' For Christians, of course, the year has an added significance, as the 2,000th anniversary of Christ's birth. In Britain the churches are urging people to see the third Millennium as a new start. They are asking everybody to mark the `Millennium Moment' just before the clock strikes twelve on New Year's Eve, by lighting a candle, keeping silence and making a Millennium resolution: `Let there be respect for the earth, peace for its people, love in our lives, delight in the good, forgiveness for past wrongs and from now on a new start.' And they are encouraging churches to take a lead in launching celebrations and projects, both in their own communities and abroad. For other faiths, following different calendars, the celebration of the Millennium is more controversial. `The year has nothing to do with Islam,' a senior British Muslim told me. `Many Muslims will see the date as not only a non-religious event, but as something which challenges religion.' Muslims observe the commercialization and hedonism hedonism (hē`dənĭz'əm) [Gr.,=pleasure], the doctrine that holds that pleasure is the highest good. Ancient hedonism expressed itself in two ways: the cruder form was that proposed by Aristippus and the early Cyrenaics, who believed of Britain's Christmas and New Year celebrations with distaste, he says. `The message seems to be, "Get drunk and forget God".' Kumar Raval, a British Hindu postgraduate student, shares the concern about the secularization of the Millennium but feels it will nonetheless be a marking moment for people of all faiths and none. `Because the calendar most people use globally is the Gregorian calendar, the Millennium will mean something to everyone,' he says. `People feel they are lucky to be alive at this time. And in my (Vaisnavite) branch of Hinduism people have been saying for years that we must enter the new Millennium with spiritual aims and a new consciousness. Internationally all sorts of prayer meetings and sacrifices are being planned.' Whatever its religious significance, the Millennium is an opportunity. For most people, of course, it's the chance for the party of the century. There's a website which will tell you where the biggest public celebrations will be; tour companies are offering New Year holidays in strategic spots, (don't miss the chance to go diving off Fiji before dawn and surface to catch the first rays of the Millennium); and all the best restaurants in Paris (and presumably pre·sum·a·ble adj. That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster. other capital cities) are already booked out. Even my local boarding kennels boarding kennels a commercial establishment which provides accommodation, feeding and general care for dogs and cats on a short term, usually weekly, basis. Well-run institutions cater only for healthy animals with a good vaccination record. are feeling the strain--people have been ringing 13 months in advance to book their dogs in over New Year 2000. Those who choose to work, rather than play, next New Year's Eve will be able to demand crazy sums--one British catering firm is talking of [pounds sterling] 1,000 for a single shift, and some babysitting agencies will be asking [pounds sterling] 40 an hour. For others, the Millennium offers the experience of a lifetime--to spend the year bicycling around the world, for instance, if you can afford the $36,000 pricetag. If you are young, you could apply to man a tall ship in a series of races around the world--Canada is looking for Looking for In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with. 2,000 candidates from which to select a crew of 500 for its entry--or join 1,000 young people from the Commonwealth in a concert tour of India. Or you could travel to see the Olympic Games in Sydney--and join in Australia's dual celebrations of the new Millennium and of its first century as a federated commonwealth. Others see the Millennium as a chance to leave a legacy to the future. The US Timecapsule in Arkansas will entomb en·tomb tr.v. en·tombed, en·tomb·ing, en·tombs 1. To place in or as if in a tomb or grave. 2. To serve as a tomb for. a fully furnished house and a variety of cars for the edification ed·i·fi·ca·tion n. Intellectual, moral, or spiritual improvement; enlightenment. Noun 1. edification - uplifting enlightenment sophistication of people 1,000 years on, and France and New Zealand also have national schemes. Countless smaller communities are also burying--or storing--parish maps, censuses, letters to descendants and artefacts, in what should be a priceless resource for future social historians. More ambitious, perhaps, are those, like the organizers of the international Jubilee 2000 campaign, who believe that the arrival of a new Millennium should make a permanent difference to the lives of future generations. The campaign calls on governments and international institutions to remit the unpayable debt of the world's poorest countries and has brought tens of thousands of people onto the streets of Europe and Canada to demonstrate their support (see page 9). Other organizations, like the Millennium Institute in Arlington, Virginia, and the World Wildlife Fund are promoting the idea of Millennium gifts. The Institute, which was set up after the publication of the Global 2000 report on the state of the world commissioned by Jimmy Carter, is asking individuals, groups and institutions to commit themselves to projects which will advance social justice and peace, or preserve the environment. `The making of Millennium Gifts will enable us, in the year 2020 or 2042, to ... point to a river no longer polluted, a forest once again flourishing, a society at last responsible and responsive, and say, "This is what we did in the year 2000",' they state. Their list of gifts already pledged include a students' network to track migrating birds in Israel, Palestine and Jordan; an American carpet company which is redesigning its manufacturing practices in the interests of the environment; a former Prime Minister of Iceland The Prime Minister of Iceland (Icelandic: Forsætisráðherra Íslands) is Iceland's head of government. The prime minister is appointed by the President and exercises executive power along with the cabinet. who is planting 1,000 trees a year and a British pharmaceutical company which is providing free anti-parasitic drugs in a bid to eliminate the disease of elephantiasis elephantiasis (ĕl`əfăntī`əsĭs), abnormal enlargement of any part of the body due to obstruction of the lymphatic channels in the area (see lymphatic system), usually affecting the arms, legs, or external genitals. . They also tell the story of a Muslim farmer in Bosnia who saved the life of a Serbian baby, by giving her mother milk from his cow every day for over a year. Spiritual leaders attending the third Parliament of the World's Religions There have been several meetings referred to as a Parliament of the World’s Religions, most notably the World's Parliament of Religions of 1893, the first attempt to create a global dialogue of faiths. in Cape Town in December 1999 will announce gifts from their traditions. The Millennium Institute's list also includes an apology--made by the United Methodist General Conference in 1996 to the Cheyenne and Arapaho peoples for a Methodist cavalry officer's role in the massacre at Sand Creek in eastern Colorado in 1864. Many groups see the Millennium as a time to try to heal the wounds of the past two thousand years. Among these are the Christians who are taking part in a Reconciliation Walk along the routes taken by the Crusaders, to apologize to Muslims and Jews for the atrocities they committed (see page 8). In western Canada this spirit found expression in 1997 in a 1,000-mile canoe voyage along the coast of British Columbia. The three canoes, built in fibreglass fibreglass or glass fibre Fibrous form of glass, developed in the 1930s. Liquid glass issues in fine streams through hundreds of fine nozzles, and the solidifying streams are gathered into a single strand and wound onto a spool. to a traditional design, were manned by members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Royal Canadian Mounted Police, constabulary organized (1873) as the Northwest Mounted Police to bring law and order to the Canadian west. In 1920 the name was changed to the present title. and people from the region's First Nations. One aim of the journey was to raise $5,000,000 to establish an addiction recovery centre in British Columbia for the year 2000. The other was healing. At each stop in their month-long journey, RCMP Inspector John Grant apologized to the First Nations communities for the abuses of the past--intolerance, the theft of land, the abduction Abduction Balfour, David expecting inheritance, kidnapped by uncle. [Br. Lit.: Kidnapped] Bertram, Henry kidnapped at age five; taken from Scotland. [Br. Lit. of children and the outlawing of languages and customs. `It is hard to overestimate the healing impact of a police apology to communities whose culture was shattered by systematic abuse,' comments Canadian singer, writer and ecologist Raffi in an article in Blue Line Magazine. On the local level too, the Millennium is providing an opportunity for reconciliation. Janet Featonby, the organizer of a heritage project in the small English village of Antrohus in Cheshire, has been astonished a·ston·ish tr.v. as·ton·ished, as·ton·ish·ing, as·ton·ish·es To fill with sudden wonder or amazement. See Synonyms at surprise. by how much it has done for her community, which is spread out along miles of country lanes. Villagers were asked to bring their old photographs, documents and memories to an event in the village hall. `People met who'd not met for ages--including two brothers,' she says. `People keep knocking on my door and leaving things and asking when we'll do it again.' In Nottingham, England, the local Council of Churches has been trying to persuade British Telecom to issue free phonecards to people who want to heal a breach. Nothing daunted daunt tr.v. daunt·ed, daunt·ing, daunts To abate the courage of; discourage. See Synonyms at dismay. [Middle English daunten, from Old French danter, from Latin by the lack of response, they are now working on a week of reconciliation in June 2000 when people will be encouraged to make up their differences or reach out to someone they haven't spoken to for a while. One of the simplest--and potentially most far-reaching--ideas focusses not on the year 2000 but on 1999. The Clean Slate Campaign is asking people to take one step in 1999 towards cleaning their slate for the new Millennium (see opposite). The idea is that whoever you are, and whatever your faith or lack of it, you can do something that will make a difference to your life--and that of the people around you--in the new Millennium. Unlike many of the schemes mentioned in this article, no funding applications or project audits are required--and there's no need to wait for anyone else. Among the galaxy of wild ideas, expensive follies, exciting challenges and worthy projects, the Clean Slate Campaign is the one that this magazine is putting its coat on. |
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