Monday, May 26, 2014

Yaqing Mao


Love: the source of a truly happy life
Three stories in developing ‘Child Friendly Schools’ in China

By Yaqing Mao,
Deputy Dean, College of Education Administration, Beijing Normal University
  
I was pleased to have the opportunity to attend the Spirit of Humanity Forum in Reykjavik in April this year, and shared my thoughts on the topic of core values in governance. As a Chinese educator and researcher, I deeply believe that love is the source of a truly happy life, and therefore love must be at the core of the values in any schools. In my experience of leading the ‘Child Friendly Schools’ project funded by the UNICEF and the Chinese government, I have learned a great deal with regard to the importance of love and compassion in education. 

Here I recall three stories.

In June 2006, for the UNICEF project, I went to spend some time at the University of Lund, Malmo, Sweden. Whilst in Malmo, I also visited some local schools, and in one of the schools, I met a Swedish teacher who had recently returned after an extended stay to China. She told me that she fell in love with Chinese culture and has been sharing her experiences in China with her students. I noticed, on the one of the boards in her classroom, the Chinese character “LOVE” written in its traditional form of which the Chinese character "heart" was a part (held with hands). In 1950s, Chinese language underwent reform and the characters taught in schools have since then been in their simplified forms. However, the traditional forms are more pictographic and more expressive of the etymology of each word. Therefore I was impressed by this teacher’s sensitivity to the deeper meaning of this Chinese word, and had been contemplating on this particular character and the notion of love since then, especially when I considered the aim of our Child Friendly Schools project. What kind of place should a school be, if not a place of love, a place built with our hearts and with care? What should be the mission of a school if not enabling each child’s flourishing?

         

Shortly after returning from Sweden, I went for a meeting in Shanghai. Arriving at the airport, I found a gigantic billboard showing the same Chinese character "love" in its traditional form, accompanied by a sentence saying "The character can be simplified, but love, missing a heart, cannot be." Indeed, in the contemporary version of the character of love, the part of heart (held with hands) is removed, leaving just the hands, which is the origin of the character “friend”. In changing the form, the character “love” has now missed out the heart and instead is stressing the meaning of support, camaraderie and friendship. Once again, I contemplated on the nuanced but most significant difference in the two ways of writing the same word. This had made me realise the need to persist on our greater mission: no matter how the aims and goals of our projects may vary, the heartfelt love must be undoubtedly what underpins all our educative endeavours.

博愛

At the beginning of the Child Friendly Schools project, many school Principals considered the idea of inclusion as being receptive. That is to say that the schools are open to children of all backgrounds and all abilities within the community. However I noted that in the day-to-day running of the school, there was little engagement with children with special educational needs or disabilities. Often they were permitted to stay on their own when the rest of the class participate in outdoor activities. When I enquired, I realised that this was because school leaders and teachers recognised these children’s special needs, had sympathy for them and therefore allowed different treatments for these students. Despite the good intention, the result was that these students were feeling isolated from the rest of the school.

Indeed, it took some time for school leaders to truly understand the difference between commiseration and compassion. Our commiseration/sympathy for the child with special needs can create emotional distance between us and the child. This is what happened in some schools. Although intending to be humanising, our commiseration can equally be dehumanising and belittling because by pitying the child’s physical difficulties and other educational needs, we were reducing the rich reality of his/her life. By contrast, our compassion for the child with special needs will enable us to understand his/her desire to be treated equally and as normal. This understanding would urge us to act on our deepest feeling and love for the child by providing the support he/she needs in order to participate in the school’s activities fully, and thereby to be included.

One headteacher told me that the most important thing for him was to help every student find his/her own values in life and self-worth, but to do so, a caring environment must be in place in the school. When a school shifts its approach to inclusion from commiseration to compassion, the children also change their attitudes towards special needs in themselves and in others. As our results show, children with special needs are becoming more confident and happier and feel that they can indeed do better for themselves.

Based on the three stories above, I try to response to topics of the SOH Forum.

First, heartfelt love is fundamental to children’s happiness and thriving in education. What does heartfelt love consist of? I believe that the following elements are fundamental: understanding, respect, care, compassion and responsibility. In other words, love without understanding is blindness; love without respect is arrogance; love without care is sham; love without compassion is pity; love without responsibility is indulgence. In the Child Friendly Schools project, each teacher and school leader must ask himself/herself whether he/she is offering the children truly heartfelt love, and whether his/her love is proactive, rigorous and nurturing and contains these key elements above. The Chinese sage Confucius implores us to cultivate love as a primary virtue. Therefore, as an educator, I believe that love must be at the centre of a school’s ethos.

Second, humanity is a core value of any school. This, I believe, is of great importance for contemporary Chinese society.

China is at the new historical junction where the society is gradually adopting a more “people-oriented” development strategy. During this transition, a single-minded pursuit of economic growth cannot meet the overall needs of the society or engender hope for its people. I believe that such shift must begin with transforming our educational system. In the past, education was considered as an important means to promote economic growth, and therefore education in China was focusing on the cultivation of skills for employment and market competition and basing its long-term evaluation mechanism on measuring students’ academic attainments. At present, the aim of education is being re-considered by the Chinese government and Chinese people. We recognise that the older view of education, although was once helpful in China’s contemporary history, also had detrimental effects, i.e. children’s critical thinking skills, creativity, imagination and the abilities take to responsibility for themselves and for others were hugely neglected. Therefore, we are updating our educational system aimed to help our children become knowledgeable, ethical and responsible citizens.


I am convinced that a truly happy life for a young person is more than academic achievement, but also involves his/her ability to connect with others and with the world, and above all with his/her inner values. In other words, education in China must explicitly be aimed at cultivating humanity which can encompass the cultivation of many essential attributes, such as talents, good personality, the ability to be free, rationality, moral sentiment, self-worth, and more. And equally important is that schools are places of humanity – of love, care and respect, so that children and young people educated in this way can aspire to be fully human themselves.

Thursday, May 22, 2014

Reflection on Contribution


Christoph Quarch-Reflection on contribution

It was a great experience for me to participate in the 2nd  of Humanity Forum and to share some insights of mine concerning the general Topic: The Power of Love and Compassion in Governance and Leadership. On Friday, 11th April, I had the honour and privilege to contribute my reflections in the section "Philosophy, Religion, Spirituality". Doing this I focussed on the issue of language: How can we talk about love without talking about love but in love? I noticed: It happens so easily that speakers fall into their usual jargon, e.g. when religious leaders speak about "love and compassion" as a stereotype. How might a fresh and authentic language look like - a language in which the word "love" triggers a particular vibrations within our souls and hearts? That we so rarely experience love in our social institutions might have got something to do with the simple fact that usually there is a language of hostility, competition and technocracy. What actually seems to be required is a new kind of "Universal Poetry" (F. Schlegel), which enables people to talk in a pure and authentic way.

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Dharma Master Hsin Tao


Love and Compassion as Core Values of the New Era
Ven. Dharma Master Hsin Tao

I am very happy to come to Iceland and share with you how I have realized love and compassion in my own life, and why the values of love and compassion are so important for this world.  I experienced the hardships of war in my childhood, and this taught me to strive for ways of alleviating suffering and helping people to achieve happiness, so that the people of this world can live together in peace, love and friendship.

I was born during World War 2nd, in a poor village in northern Burma. I was separated from my parents around age 4, and entered a Burmese guerrilla army at age 9 as a child soldier.  Seeing all the people who were displaced by the war, my heart felt very sad and heavy.  I wished that there could be more happiness in the world, and not this much suffering.

One day when I was teenager, I heard the chanting of the holy name of Guanshiyin, the Bodhisattva of Compassion.  It deeply touched my heart, and made me understand what it means to have a heart of compassion for others. It was a moment in which compassion and the power of love completely merged – making me realize that this whole world of ours is deeply interconnected, that it is one living body in all of its diversity.

Ever since that experience, I made up my mind emulate Guanyin`s compassion in “saving people from suffering” myself and help this world change for the better.
How to be compassionate? What to do to really help people? I myself found out through the practice of Ch’an meditation, which helped me to settle and purify my heart and mind.  It is this inner purity that gives birth to true love and compassion.  The practice of Ch`an makes us discover that we are all one deeply interconnected body. It makes us realize compassion, joy and freedom from attachment. In the past thirty years of teaching Ch’an meditation, I have led students to understand the nature of reality through contemplation, to become unbound and free by observing the nature of our heart and mind, and then to give back and devote themselves to others.

I have traveled all around the world to spread my faith in this kind of governance – namely achieving inner peace of heart and mind, which gives birth to compassion, to unwavering self-sacrifice and devotion.  It is this eternal promise that can transform the world into one real body of interconnectedness.

With the rapid development of the internet, people have become more separated, since they lack direct, personal interaction. Virtual interactions driven by personal interest have taken the place of a wholesome partnership based on harmony and mutual benefit.
From now on, we must change to let love and compassion become the values of the new era!  We can start from Ch’an meditation to recover the spiritual connections among us.  Through Ch’an we can uncover freedom and balance of our heart and mind.  When our heart is at peace, everything that happens will be harmonious.  This is very important for the world!  

“Governance by harmony” is to understand the actual needs of co-existence in its diversity. It means the ability to create co-existence based on love.  It is similar to the interdependence and co-existence of all the things in the biosphere.  We must accept the fact of our mutual dependence and coexistence in order to be able to transform the many conflicts in our world. 

I have created the “The Museum of World Religions” as a platform to promote “respect, tolerance and love” among religions and to strive for their peaceful co-existence.  The Museum is also a venue for Life –Education, in children and students are taught a life based on the values of caring for self and others. Currently I am planning a “University of Life and Peace” with the mission of further fostering “Love and Peace”.  In this interdisciplinary university we want to equip students of all ages with the caring attitude, insight and knowledge to address the pressing issues of our times and help find solutions, to cultivate peace. Please join us in giving birth to this ““University of Life and Peace”!

My deepest thanks go to the hosts and organizers of this important Forum.  May it contribute to spreading love and compassion to all the ends of the World.

David Cadman with drums by Masankho Banda

We would love to share this inspirational closing prayer, read out by David Cadman with drums by Masankho Banda, at the closing session of our Reykjavik Conference.


In the East came the morning, the breath of life
Hear our prayer
In the South came noontide, the energy of fire
Hear our prayer
In the West comes evening, the waters of reflection
Hear our prayer
In the North comes darkness, the wisdom of the Earth
And in the Centre the Great Tree,
Above and below and all around.

Divine Father, Divine Mother hear our prayer
And let our cry come unto thee.

We asked for a gathering,
You brought us together
We asked for stories,
You brought us together
We asked for hope and inspiration,
You brought us together
We asked for a safe place to be heard,
You brought us together.

It was good to gather together
It was good to share our stories
It was good to feel hopeful and inspired
It was good to find a safe place to be heard.

We ask that this gathering becomes a global family, 
a caring community of practitioners.

And in the name of our ancestors, our children, our 
grandchildren and all who will come to be, we make a promise 
that we will continue our work of love, care and compassion.

Until we meet again,
May we be at one with each other
May we be at one with Mother Earth and all her children
May we learn to love – to Be in Love

Until we meet again,
May we travel well until we come home
May we dwell in love and compassion
Always and Everywhere.




Let it be so

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Scilla Elworthy Notes


Spirit of Humanity Session II: Scilla Elworthy Notes

The gathering in Iceland proves to be a fascinating melting pot of great ideas and a high quality of heart-opening. I would say that an energetic field has been created - that quantum physicists would recognise clearly. My contribution was to suggest how some centuries-old but now out-dated vales can be replaced with more energetic current ones that young people resonate with.

Thursday, April 17, 2014

Kul Chandra Gautam



Governance with a Human Face: Iceland and the Spirit of Humanity
By Kul Chandra Gautam

From 10 to 12 April 2014, Reykjavik, Iceland hosted a fascinating international conference called the Second Forum of the ‘Spirit of Humanity’ with the unusual theme of “Power of Love and Compassion in Governance”. Attended by some 250 participants from 40 countries, the Forum brought together philosophers and philanthropists, spiritual leaders and environmental activists, advocates of peace and champions of human rights. The President of Iceland graced the occasion, hosted a reception and made substantive remarks, as did the Mayor of Reykjavik.

For the uninitiated and those not very knowledgeable about Iceland, at first, the topic of the conference sounded like an airy-fairy philosophical discourse. But deeper reflection brought home the relevance of the subject even to many former diplomats, politicians, and corporate executives, attending the conference.  

Sunday, April 13, 2014

Jón Gnarr



Speech of Jón Gnarr at the inauguration of the Spirit of Humanity Forum

Spirit of Humanity Forum 
Opnunarræða í Hörpu 
Fimmtudagur 10. apríl 2014 kl. 9.00 

Mr. Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson, president of Iceland. Other distinguished guests. 

Welcome to Reykjavík. 

We are truly honoured to host the Spirit of Humanity Forum again here in our city. I am also happy to say that Reykjavík has many things to offer you, as it has in relatively few years grown into a popular and lively cultural destination. But Reykjavík is not only a city of international dimensions. It is still friendly. It is still peaceful. And we intend to keep it that way. I do hope that your experience of Reykjavík will be that of a city that welcomes you with love and a warm embrace. 

But why are we here? Why does Reykjavík participate in Spirit of Humanity? 

The short answer is that we think it is very important to work for peace and human rights - for all people. You can say there were three main things that caught our attention when first introduced to the project in 2010. 

Firstly, it is the aim to focus on spirituality as a driving force in the lives of individuals, communities and nations. A force to bring about positive changes. 

Secondly, it is the intention to create a universally respected forum that regularly brings together influential international leaders. Individuals that wish to focus on the higher human values and spirituality in decision-making. 

Thirdly, it is the will to use our ability to work together with care, kindness and respect - in order to find solutions to the challenges the world is facing. 

Leaders in all parts of the world must realise that there is need for a changed mindset in order to make necessary changes. The forum here in Reykjavík is a great venue to discuss the paths individuals and communities can take in order to grow and bring about these changes. It is also meant to encourage us to take a stand and act in a way that contributes to a better future. 

The first Spirit of Humanity Forum was held in Reykjavík in 2012. Back then we talked about resetting the compass and creating a landscape of new opportunities. We talked about transforming politics and revising values. 

This year we focus on exploring the potential of love and compassion in bringing about effective change through governance and leadership. 

But what does this really mean? How can love and compassion in governance work in real life? How can we change and what should we change? 

I have a suggestion. 

We live in times where global warming is by far the biggest threat to human existence. We sometimes tend to forget this and think only of so called opportunities. In Iceland we may even think global warming will bring us better weather. This is of course because we can never really rely on good