We must live with principles of peace and love


Date posted: October 17, 2015

KARACHI / PAKISTAN

“Yesterday I was clever, so I wanted to change the world. Today I am wise, so I am changing myself.”

With Rumi’s words, a roundtable discussion began at the Marriott hotel on Wednesday. The theme of the discussion was ‘Respect Differences and Diversity to Foster Peace and Harmony’ and was organised by the Rumi Forum, a Turkey-based organisation, which aims to bring people of diverse backgrounds together to exchange ideas and opinions and to provide a common platform for education and information exchange. The organisation takes its name and mission from the 13th century mystical poet, Jalaluddin Rumi.

sait-celik

The director of the Rumi Forum in Karachi, Sait Celik, said that everyone in this world should be accepted. He gave Islamic references, stressing on the fact that, if a person hates another person, and the second person hates the first one, the only result will be hatred and intolerance. “We have to accept everyone as they are,” he said, adding that all religions of the world are based on peace, love and harmony.

Author Rumana Husain spoke about how multi-cultural diversities make life interesting and beautiful by sharing her experience of travelling around the US, China and France. Referring to life in Karachi, Husain said this city attracts a lot of people, making the city populated and diverse but a sense of ownership is lacking among the citizens of Karachi. According to her, living in Karachi has its challenges but life in the city can become easy if the Karachi walay take ownership of the city.

zohra-yusuf

Everyone in this world speaks one language and that is the language of love, said columnist Ghazi Salahuddin. “Today, we must try to relate Rumi’s messages to our lives to live with peace and love,” he said. Speaking about history, Salahuddin said during the time of Rumi, there was bloodshed and today society is getting more intolerant day by day, as if humanity has not moved forward and it is at the same point as it was in the 13th century.

The chairperson of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, Zohra Yusuf, said the root cause of the terrorism and intolerance in our society is because all of us want to see a certain type of person around us. Yusuf felt Karachi’s diversity is under threat and unless we address the issues that are causing this intolerance in society, we will not be able to spread the message of love.

Naeem Zamindar, a teacher, was of the view that life is a journey. He added that love is not an emotion, but rather an essence. President of the Karachi Sikh Baradari, Sardar Ramesh Singh, said that living in Pakistan, they do not feel separated. “Who ever loved humanity or taught humanity to others, only that person can find God,” said Singh.

Meanwhile, Dr Sajida Zaki, professor and chairperson of NED University’s humanities department, said education is not about learning new things but rather it is human development. “With human development, people learn to adapt to life with people of different backgrounds,” she claimed. Activist Roland deSouza said the basic problem is of the haves and have nots. He reminded the audience that differences in race, language, cast and colour have brought us here but we all are from a single cell.

Source: The Express Tribune , October 16, 2015


Related News

Peshawar High Court Restrains Federal Government From Deporting Turkish Teachers Of Pak-Turk School Till Dec 1

The petitioners submitted before the court that Pak-Turk schools had been imparting quality education to hundreds of Pakistani children. They said that the forced deportation of Turkish teachers and other staff members was illegal as they had been provided protection under the Constitution.

‘Living Together’ under capital punishment

Yavuz Baydar An intensity of expectations and a fear of failure are now part of the peculiar process of Turkey’s transition towards democracy. It becomes rough and complicated, as days go by; it has hit serious snags. The heart of the matter is living together in peace and accord. When I watched a fresh manifestation […]

Erdogan’s ego eclipses Pakistan-Turkey ties

In Pakistan, where more than 27 million children remain out of school, every teacher and educational institution matters. The Turkish non-governmental schools in question are ranked among the best in terms of in infrastructure, as well as quality of education and character-building.

Ivory Coast authorities call on Kimse Yok Mu for more aid

Authorities of Cocody ve Port-Bouët, two municipalities in Abidjan, Ivory Coast’s capital of business, hailed Kimse Yok Mu for its aid efforts.

Fethullah Gulen – a humanist par excellence

LAHORE, Nov 21, 2012: Hizmet Movement was launched in Turkey with the aim of serving individual, society and religion as had been the teaching of Fethullah Gulen. This was consensus among speakers at an international conference on “Ideal human and ideal society in the thoughts of M Fethullah Gulen,” arranged at the Punjab University Law […]

Pak-Turk schools: Parents urge government against transferring administration to Erdogan-linked organization

“All the Turkish teachers and administrators have left Pakistan and the schools are being run by Pakistanis,” said one of the parents Syed Amir Abdullah. He added that the government still seemed hell bent on ruining these institutions by handing them over to an ‘infamous organisation’ which has no experience of running them.

Latest News

Fethullah Gulen – man of education, peace and dialogue – passes away

Fethullah Gülen’s Condolence Message for South African Human Rights Defender Archbishop Desmond Tutu

Hizmet Movement Declares Core Values with Unified Voice

Ankara systematically tortures supporters of Gülen movement, Kurds, Turkey Tribunal rapporteurs say

Erdogan possessed by Pharaoh, Herod, Hitler spirits?

Devious Use of International Organizations to Persecute Dissidents Abroad: The Erdogan Case

A “Controlled Coup”: Erdogan’s Contribution to the Autocrats’ Playbook

Why is Turkey’s Erdogan persecuting the Gulen movement?

Purge-victim man sent back to prison over Gulen links despite stage 4 cancer diagnosis

In Case You Missed It

Educational unions lash out against gov’t-backed school raids

Fethullah Gulen and His Movement: A Brief Introduction

Gülen ‘speechless’ on gov’t action plan against Hizmet movement

Erdoğan now targets foreign countries for granting asylum to critics

Bank Asya says it weathers ‘stress test’, still strong

Turkish teacher dies of cancer, buried in Australia

Bryan couple joins interfaith tour of Turkey

Copyright 2025 Hizmet News