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'Day of Reconciliation' Proposed in Malaysia
A proposal for a ‘Day of Reconciliation’, inspired by the Australian Reconciliation Movement and by the women’s initiative, Creators of Peace Circles, both components of the recent IofC conference ‘Tools for Change’ in Malaysia, has been reported on Malaysiakini.com, a news website reaching 1.6 million visitors per month. The independent website is ‘supportive of justice, human rights, democracy, freedom of speech and good governance’. The report by Malaysian journalist M Krishnamoorthy, was posted on 9 March 2009:
May 13 mooted as day of reconciliation
M Krishnamoorthy | Mar 9, 09 2:01pm
Creators of Peace Circle at Tools for ChangeBased on the notion that ‘Change, peace starts with me’, a conference on ‘Tools for Change’ has mooted that May 13 be turned into a day of forgiveness and reconciliation among Malaysians. Initiatives of Change (IofC), formerly known as the Moral Re-Armament movement, has taken up the idea and is now working towards ‘National Reconciliation Day’ on May 13.
It has formed a committee, Creators of Peace Circle, following a four-day international conference held last week.
Project coordinator Regina Morris said the spectre of the racial riots of May 13, 1969 has raised fear and that many are still not willing to face it.
‘A group of participants from the conference decided to lay the ghost to rest by turning the spectre of May 13 into a National Day of Reconciliation,’ she explained.
The committee hopes to launch the project by providing victims of the May 13 incident with a safe space to talk about what they experienced during that week of fear and violence.
‘National Reconciliation Day is designed to draw participants through personal reflection to an awareness of needs in their own lives and communities, and to encourage steps to take to create peace,’ said Morris.
‘It allows space for people to tell their deepest stories and to be heard without judgment and in strictest confidentiality. ‘It is formatted to build deep listening, which is a powerful tool of release and personal transformation.
Quoting Mahatma Gandhi who inspired the formation of IofC, Morris said: ‘There is no way to peace - Peace is the way.’
IofC is an international movement for social and global transformation inspired by personal transformation. It was started in 1938 as Moral Re-Armament.
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