Reverend Desmond Mpilo Tutu, South African cleric and activist for peace and human rights. Archbishop Emeritus of Cape Town, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, the Albert Schweitzer Prize for Humanitarianism, the Gandhi Peace Prize, and first Nuclear Age Peace Foundation Outstanding Leader for Peace.
"There are conflicts that are raging all over the world principally between peoples who have no desire to live as good neighbors, be it Israel – Palestine or Kashmir...
Chilean writer (poet, playwright, novelist and essayist) and human rights activist. His most famous work, Death and the Maiden, was made into a film by Roman Polanski, featuring the actors Sigourney Weaver and Ben Kingsley. Read more in Wikipedia.
International Ecology and Peace Organization, economically and politically independent, not accepting donations or pressure from governments, political parties or businesses.
Angel Parra (Chile) Extremely well known Chilean musician. Son of Violeta Parra, has played music since the age of 5. Founder of Peña de los Parra (the Parra Gang). Read more...
Mario Luis Rodríguez Cobos - Silo (Argentina)
“This World March can help create awareness about peace and nonviolence.”
Writer, thinker, founder of Universalist Humanism. Doctor “Honoris Causa,” Russian Academy of Sciences.
“It is important to engrave in the memory of the new generations that human beings of different cultures and beliefs are crying out for peace, and that the struggle to achieve it is through nonviolence.”
Patricia Faessler (Switzerland) "The longer we wait for wonders, the sooner we destroy the world. Please join the forces for peace." Patricia Faessler is model, photographer and human rights activist. She is peace ambassador for the world wide march in Switzerland and contact person for personalities who wish to support the march for peace and non violence. Read more...
Ana Marta Moreno de Araujo (El Salvador) Professor at Dr. Andres Bello University. President of the El Salvadorian Association of Business Administration (2005-2007). Read more...
Mauricio Rosencof (Uruguay)
“In peace you think, feel, dream, love, and have children - only in peace. Even tears, in peace, are scarcely a pause in the joy of life.”
The Nonviolent Movement (Italy) Nonviolence is on the march. The horizon towards which we are all heading is the same, but many are the paths to choose from – higher or lower – faster or slower – with luggage that is lighter or heavier. Read more...
Dennis Kucinich (USA)
Democratic Party Member of the US House of Representatives for the 10th District of Ohio since 1996. Presidential Candidate in 2004 and 2008.
The World March will begin in New Zealand on October 2, 2009, the anniversary of Gandhi’s birth, declared the “International Day of Non-Violence” by the United Nations. It will conclude in the Andes Mountains (Punta de Vacas, Aconcagua, Argentina) on January 2, 2010. The March will last 90 days, three long months of travel. It will pass through all climates and seasons, from the hot summer of the tropics and the deserts, to the winter of Siberia. The stages will be the longest American and Asian, both almost a month. A permanent base of a hundred people of different nationalities will complete the journey.
Why?
Because we can end world hunger with 10% of what is spent on arms. Imagine how life would be if 30-50% of the arms budget went toward improving people’s lives instead of being used for destruction.
Because eliminating wars and violence means leaving human pre-history behind and taking a giant step forward in the evolution of our species..
Because we are accompanied by the voices of so many war-torn generations that came before us. The echo of their voices still resounds throughout the world, wherever armed conflict leaves its sinister memorial to the dead, disappeared, disabled and displaced.
Because a “world without wars” is an image that opens the future and seeks to become reality in every corner of the planet, as violence gives way to dialog.
The moment has come for the voiceless to be heard! Out of agonizing and urgent need, millions of human beings are crying out for an end to wars and violence.
We can make that happen by uniting all the forces of pacifism and active non-violence worldwide.
When?
The World March will begin in New Zealand on October 2, 2009, the anniversary of Gandhi’s birth, declared the “International Day of Non-Violence” by the United Nations. It will conclude in the Andes Mountains (Punta de Vacas, Aconcagua, Argentina) on January 2, 2010.
The March will last 90 days, three long months of travel. It will pass through all climates and seasons, from the hot summer of the tropics and the deserts, to the winter of Siberia.
Who is participating?
The March was initiated by “World Without Wars,” an international organization that has been working for 15 years in the fields of pacifism and non-violence.
The World March, however, will be created and shaped by everyone. Open to any person, organization, collective, group, political party, business, etc., that shares the same aspirations and sensibility, this project is not something closed. Instead, it is a journey that will be progressively enriched as different initiatives set their contributions in motion.
That is why this is an invitation to anyone and everyone to participate freely. So that wherever the March goes, the local people can contribute their creativity in a great convergence of multiple activities.
There’s space for everything the imagination is capable of conceiving.
The possible channels of participation are multiple and diverse, including virtual participation in the March through Internet. This is a march by and for the people, with hopes of reaching most of the world’s population. For this reason we are asking all media to spread the word about this journey around the world for Peace and Non-violence.
What is going to happen?
In every city the March visits, local individuals and groups will organize forums, meetings, festivals, conferences, and events (sports, cultural, social, musical, artistic, educational, etc., depending on their own creative initiative.
At this time hundreds of projects have already been set in motion by different individuals and organizations.
What are our goals?
To denounce the dangerous world situation that is leading us closer and closer to nuclear war, which would be the greatest catastrophe in human history – a dead end.
To give a voice to the majority of world citizens who want peace. Although the majority of the human race opposes the arms race, we are not sending out a unified signal. Instead we are letting ourselves be manipulated by a powerful minority and suffering the consequences. The time has come to stand together and show our opposition. Join a multitude of others in sending a clear signal, and your voice will have to be heard!
To achieve the eradication of nuclear weapons; the progressive and proportional reduction of non-nuclear arms; the signing of non-aggression treaties among nations; and the renunciation by governments of war as a way to resolve conflicts.
To expose the many other forms of violence (economic, racial, sexual, religious…) that are currently hidden or disguised by their perpetrators; and to provide a way for all who suffer such violence to be heard.
To create global awareness - as has already happened with environmental issues - of the urgent need to condemn of all forms of violence and bring about real Peace.