International Day of Peace | United Nations
Each year the International Day of Peace (IDP) is observed around the world on 21 September.
The UN General Assembly has declared this as a day devoted to strengthening the ideals of peace.
The United Nations’ (UN) International Day of Peace is celebrated each year to recognize the efforts of those who have worked hard to end conflict and promote peace.
The International Day of Peace is 24 hours of non-violence and ceasefire – personal or political.
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September 18, 2023
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.: Peace For All Time
“Waging endless wars abroad, we have neglected the foundation of our own well-being. We have a decaying economic infrastructure. We have a demoralized people and despairing people. We have toxins in our air and our soil and our water. We have deteriorating mental and physical health. These are the wages of war…What will be the wages of peace?”
Peace For All Time
Episode 3: Running on Truth
Team Kennedy
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What Do People Do on International Peace Day?
https://www.timeanddate.com/holidays/un/international-peace-day
On the International Day of Peace, also known as Peace Day, people around the world take part in various activities and organize events centered on the theme “peace”. Events vary from private gatherings to public concerts and forums involving large audiences. Activities include:
- Interfaith peace ceremonies
- A toast for peace
- A peace choir
- Lighting candles
- Peace prayers
- A peace convoy of vehicles
- Tree planting for peace
- Art exhibitions promoting peace
- Picnics for peace
- Peace walks
Organizations such as Roots & Shoots, an international environmental and humanitarian program for youth, show their support for the event on an annual basis. Young people involved in Roots & Shoots may engage in activities such as crafting giant peace dove puppets from re-used materials and flying the doves in their communities.
People from diverse religious and spiritual backgrounds also commit to organizing an International Day of Peace Vigil. Some groups observe a minute of silence at noon in every time zone across the world on Peace Day.
The UN’s International Day of Peace is a global observance and not a public holiday. It is a day when nations around the world are invited to honor a cessation of hostilities during the day.
Background
A UN resolution established the International Day of Peace in 1981 to coincide with the opening of the UN General Assembly.
The first Peace Day was celebrated in 1982 and was held on the third Tuesday of September each year until 2002, when September 21 became the permanent date for the International Day of Peace.
The assembly decided in 2001 that the International Day of Peace should be annually observed on September 21 starting from 2002.
By setting a fixed date for the International Day of Peace,
the assembly declared that the day should be observed
as a day of global ceasefire and non-violence.
By creating the International Day of Peace, the UN devoted itself to worldwide peace and encouraged people to work in cooperation for this goal.
Since its inception, Peace Day has marked personal and planetary progress toward peace.
It has grown to include millions of people worldwide and many events are organized each year to commemorate and celebrate this day.
Symbols
The peace dove flying with an olive branch in its beak is one of the most commonly featured symbols for the day. In Judaism, Christianity, and Islam a white dove is generally a sign for peace.
The dove can also represent “hope for peace” or a peace offering from one person to another, hence the phrase “to extend an olive branch”.
Often, the dove is represented as still in flight to remind people of its role as messenger.
International Day of Peace: September 21
I invoke
the Divine Mother, Sanat Kumara
& the Universal Law of CHANGE
for balance: mind, body, family
for hope & joy, give & receive
for LOVE & TRUTH,
for PEACE on Gaia.