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Visions of a better world

In her final blog, Maureen describes how inner peace is the way to a peaceful planet

When I listen to news broadcasts I look out for the bits of goodness or heroic acts that sometimes creep in. They are very few. Yet I know that there are many good people in the world doing wonderful things to help humanity. It may be on a large scale, such as coordinating relief operations. These may be on a small scale, such as becoming a full time carer for an ailing relative. When most people just want to live peaceful lives and do good, how come our world has become what it is today?

One of the things I have come to learn through understanding and applying spiritual principles in my life is: whatever is within is reflected without. The inner state of human beings creates the outer state of the world. This seems like a cliché, yet when I look at it in relation to everyday experience, it rings very true.

In the year 2000, I was involved in activities to celebrate the International Year for a Culture of Peace. The Brahma Kumaris collected tens of millions of signatures worldwide for ‘Manifesto 2000’. This looked at peace as a culture of values. Which values and whose values? Values that belong to all of us: respect for life, non-violence, sharing with others, listening to understand, sustainability and solidarity. Living by our values makes for a peaceful world. The catch is that values have to be lived at every moment of our lives, even the most private. It is easy to display positive values with people we love and respect, but what about those who do not share the same outlook as I do or who hurt me through their behaviour?

Violence in any form begets violence; this is true in a family argument or in conflict between nations. Due to the massive publicity machines at work and the general insecurity that people are facing economically and socially, the cycle of violence is more pronounced than ever. Values are forgotten when issues of identity and pride are at stake. We strengthen our values by experiencing our inherent goodness, our spirituality. We weaken our values when that is forgotten.

The strength to live our values honestly and consistently comes through our relationship with God. We may ask, “Where is God with all the sorrows of the world?” but we must first ask ourselves, “Where is God in my day-to-day life?”

It is time to focus on spiritual solutions. The power of prayer can heal my body, positive thoughts and outlook can heal my relationships, positive words can empower and noble actions can give hope and inspiration. The world now needs ordinary people to lead the way. I find in my work that many people are of the same mind.

In the 1930’s, Brahma Baba, the founder of the Brahma Kumaris, had a vision of a world where spirituality was a way of life. In the 1990’s, as part of our work as an NGO in consultative status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council, we coordinated a project called ‘Global Cooperation for a Better World,' which took place in 129 countries. We asked people simply to share their vision of a better world. Across all levels of social strata – princes and prime ministers, aboriginal elders in central Australia, shoe-shine boys in Brazil and lepers in the Philippines - people all over the world wanted a world based on values such as peace, love, respect, joy and truth. (These visionary statements were published in 1993 in 'Visions of a Better World'.

Last September we launched just-a-minute at Wembley Arena in London. It is an initiative encouraging people to incorporate regular one-minute silence breaks into their busy lives so as to re-connect with their core self, strengths and values. just-a-minute has had an overwhelming response. The launch event alone was attended by 10,000 people and over 30 million connected in a minute of positive silence for the world through TV, radio and simultaneous events in 120 countries world-wide. It was an incredibly moving and inspiring demonstration of the growing recognition of the power of inner peace.

In the Brahma Kumaris we have the slogan ‘when we change, the world changes.' If we wish to create a world of peace, this is truly the only way. It has never been a majority that has changed the world; it has always been just a small group of committed individuals who have made a major impact on history. The transformation of the minority reaching the point of critical mass will shift the majority and create a culture of peace.

When there is peace within, peace in the world is not impossible.

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4 comments from readers

Charoo
03 May 2007 at 10:09

I would like to have more details on practicing, the values mentioned, in daily life

avyakt7
13 May 2007 at 18:07

My experience with God.

Last March 2007, I went to Mount Abu in Rajasthan, India. 20,000 people from many nationalities were there in a huge auditorium. It was packed. These people were waiting for God to appear. “He” appeared, gave a talk and went away.

The thought behind it is that God is a soul. Human beings are “beings” meaning souls as well but with a body, therefore humans.

God does not have a body. “He” is incorporeal and thus, “He” needs to take a body in order to communicate with us. In that occasion, “He” took a body through a process known as channeling.

The message in these meetings is simple. We are souls living on the illusion that we are perishable bodies. Thus, become soul conscious to avoid the suffering of only being aware of an impermanent body …and the second part of the message is…the world will go through a deep period of change marked by natural disasters and world wide political unrest; thus soul consciousness is necessary to overcome these changes and minimize suffering.

It wasn’t hard for me to figure out that natural disasters and political unrest are taking place. Had the chance to watch the movie “The inconvenient Truth” with Al Gore, where the facts as I understood it where laid out in a different way, but with the same message. A quick look at drinkable water scarcity around the world as well as the proliferation of atomic weapons and terrorism added up to an easy to solve equation which requires minimum thought.

With everyone else stating that God is here or there or that God does not exist, How do I know if this is really God?

The short answer is by relationship and experience. When you are in relationship with someone, you know just about everything about that person. In the same way, you have a relationship in a subtle manner with God. That relationship is so powerful that it must bring transformation in you. You will not be the same again. In my case, my own little world was transformed in such a deep way that I felt the mythological phoenix bird was me. I was being reborn again out of my own ashes.

Ask yourself: What is your relationship with God? Are you a happy, genuine, positive individual as a consequence of being colored by God’s company?

I had the fortune of having many subtle experiences with God. One of them was there in India. I was meditating in a mountain, overlooking at the beauty of nature. In a moment of deep feelings, I extend my hands as if I wanted to reach God’s hands as if I wanted to hold onto something, as if I was looking for that protection and love… then after that I stopped meditating and went away.

The next day I left Rajasthan. On my way out, I stopped by to say “good bye.”

I received some sort of “fortune cookie,” a blessing which is given randomly. Mine was: “You have the happiness that the Father of all souls have taken your hands, and has called you his special beloved child.” Probably the odds of winning the Lotto are higher than to receive the exact reply at the right time.

When God comes you feel this energy in that room. The first time I went there, tears were coming out of my eyes. I cannot explain why. The soul has its own language.

There is no “fireworks” there. No magic act. No scientific responses… but I felt simplicity, royalty, love and a sense of belonging. That is what Brahma Kumaris meant to me.

I am always surprised on how people nowadays are unable to feel. Without feelings you cannot have a connection with an entity which only feels purity. Feelings are the language of souls. To feel the beauty of nature, without trying to analyze it. To feel the rhythm and timing of music without placing a label on it. To feel the vibrations of different people that come your way without having to ask for their intentions… to feel joy, happiness, bliss without the need of “technology”…We reach God with our hearts. Never with our thinking heads.

To feel empathy. To have greater sensibility to those things beyond the grasp of our physical senses is something which is not being taught at universities. We come equipped with this when we are toddlers but… we loose it as we grow older and “wise” ….

To feel is something God taught me again. To feel “Him” is something which I cherish, something fulfilling, blissful; beyond any words or explanations. Something which I have never experienced before with all my university degrees…I am no longer describing life, analyzing it, dissecting it.. but being in it. Tasting it. Experiencing it. Not being afraid of it….then, finally…loving it. As the Father, the child.

Even though many can argue in different ways, to me the authority of experience it is all that matters. I felt God. My heart tells me so. I felt it in India.. and it was through the Brahma Kumaris teachings.

Mythbuster
25 February 2008 at 19:22

Brahma Kumaris's actual teaching bears no resemblance to the contents of these articles. Beware!

bm_trivedi
01 December 2008 at 09:50

An excellent articulation of a deep experience which I

can 'feel' & relate with! Very 'touching' indeed!!

If this can happens thr' Brahmakumaris, one must

have openness to explore, and 'experience'. Having

preconceived notions will not help anyone experience!

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