Category Archives: Latin America

Brazil: Mahatma Gandhi monologue will bring the Culture of Peace to the Municipal Theater of Barueri

… EDUCATION FOR PEACE …

An announcement by Barueri na Rede (translated by CPNN)

On Thursday, September 9, with two presentations, at 3 PM and 8 PM, the Municipal Theater of Barueri will feature the free monologue of Mahatma Gandhi, The Change We Want to See, performed by the actor and journalist João Signorelli. The purpose of the show is ‘to spread a culture of peace and to replace the culture of war and domination of the other by a culture of respect and acceptance of cultural diversity’.


During the 50-minute presentation, Signorelli shows the public the trajectory of Gandhi as leader and his task of sowing solidarity among peoples. Throughout the day there will be a program focused on the theme Culture of Peace and Nonviolence, a thinking for peace – that begins at 1:00 pm with the exhibition Occupation for Peace, followed at 2:00 pm by a children’s talk and a sample of research on the theme done by students of the municipal network.

The first presentation of Gandhi’s monologue will be at 3 o’clock. The program extends to 19 hours with poems recited by students of municipal schools and ends at 20 hours, with another presentation of the show Mahatma Gandhi – The Change We Want to See.

In 2000, the manifesto For a Culture of Peace and Non-Violence was launched by Unesco with six basic principles: respect for life; reject violence; be generous; listen to understand; preserve the planet; rediscover solidarity.

For those who want to check out the monologue presentations, free tickets are already available at the TMB box office, located at Rua Ministro Raphael de Barros Monteiro, 255, in Jardim dos Camargos.

(Click here for the original Portuguese version)

Mexico: Cristina Ávila-Zesatti and peace journalism

FREE FLOW OF INFORMATION

An interview by Erik Flores for NTR Zacatecas

Although she could be considered a wandering soul, because she has changed cities more times than her years, Cristina Ávila-Zesatti still retains her two great dreams of 20 years ago: that of exercising a journalism that awakens consciousness and being grateful to the people who have helped her on her way.

In an interview with NTR Media, the writer commented that she provides an emotional break from conventional journalism that you read every day, because she has dedicated herself to peace journalism. For this she does not restrict herself to “good news”, but she approaches reality with another perspective and another ethical motivation. Instead of emphasizing conflicts, she highlights solutions.

“I consider that conflicts, from open warfare to economic, political and ecological conflicts of all kinds, can be seen from the perspective of offering a solution. Even if only a description of the problem is made, this type of journalism achieves a completely different social change than one gets from conventional journalism,” she said.

On November 4, the Women’s Peacepower Foundation will award Cristina Ávila Zesatti the Woman Peace Award 2017 at its headquarters in Tampa, Florida, USA, for the work she has done for peace, especifically her peace journalism .

She has worked for “the great monsters” of the media and realized the difference between counting not only the problems but also peaceful, non-violent outlooks; “I found there is a whole social universe ignored by traditional journalism, even scorned, badly treated and a bad way to tackle content, and in this universe I discovered the peace that you can find in the world.”

For this reason, Ávila-Zesatti wrote her first book: “Mexico in the labyrinth of contradiction.” It shows how to bring peace to a country that is not officially at war by explaining the phenomenon of violence from the perspective of peace studies.

Now in Zacatecas she is writing “Peace that does exist (and that journalism ignores)”, in which 20 international stories of peace are told; for three years the book was rejected by eight publishers, and now in its second edition, Texere distributes it throughout Mexico.

 Culture of violence

Cristina Avila-Zesatti explains that “what we are seeing now is a very deep corruption since 2006, with the war against narco, when a very irresponsible civil war was declared, and now what scares us is physical violence, death. ”

However, she stressed that Mexico has for many years been immersed in a violent culture, “and now it is turning against us, that is why I am saddened so much the way that the media covers this phenomenon. It hurts us all. As a guild it does not help to heal, it does not help the country to heal, it does not help the country to understand itself in another way “.

She poses the question, if the narco traffic were to be terminated, by legalization or some other way, “would people stop killing?, would there be no more deaths from the drug? I do not think so because the wound in Mexico is much deeper. It is time that we start to face it in another way, because to divide the country into hitmen, policemen, military and ordinary people will not lead us to heal. We are killing each other, this is really a civil war, I do not think compartmentalizing violence is the solution. ”

“It is not that homicides are more important than femicides, but our great capacity as a people for cruelty is worrying. We are a cruel people. And you can see in simple comments about Enrique Peña Nieto, when people regret that the plane did not crash in which he was traveling.”

Ávila-Zesatti explains that “this speaks of the underlying, cultural, learned violence that we have normalized. You can see when there is a news about a riot in jail. The comments are: ‘the more they suffer, the better’. Even though journalism does not cause this, journalism creates a vicious cycle that puts us into a downward spiral from which it will be hard to escape. ”

(Interview continued in right column)

(Click here for the original program in Spanish)

Question for this article

Journalism in Latin America: Is it turning towards a culture of peace?

(Interview continued from left column)

That is why she has dedicated herself to peace journalism, “which is not “ipso facto” journalism, a journalism of reaction. It is not catchy headlines; I believe that journalists have in their hands an enormous responsibility to make ordinary people understand the world around them. ”

However, adds Cristina Ávila-Zesatti, “if journalists do not even understand what is happening around us, if we do not scratch deep, if we do not investigate, if we do not put together the pieces that allow us to have moral responsibility, to try to explain the world to others , we are part of the problem.”

For this woman from Zacatecas, “the world needs a “slow journalism,” because the world is going very fast. We need to explain what is happening, but the journalists themselves are not understanding it or giving themselves the opportunity to understand it. ”

On how to do peace journalism in Zacatecas, Cristina Ávila-Zesatti stressed: “one must have the intention. In Zacatecas and in Mexico, in general, I would be pleased to hear journalists who know what needs to be done.”

She added: “in Zacatecas I have not found the curiosity that the profession of journalism should have. Journalists are not well trained. They are very politicized, with many interests, which are completely removed from journalistic ethics. The first thing that is needed is to do something for society, to accept that the vocation and profession of journalist means that you never stop learing, because you are covering a reality that is constantly changing.”

“Journalists should always be learning, because we form minds. I have offered courses in peace journalism, but no one wants to take them. And it is paradoxical that in other countries I recognized for what I do for peace journalism while in Zacatecas I have not been able to do anything with it,” she lamented.

“I love my land very much, but precisely because I love her, I can not help but see her great reluctance to move forward from her stagnant situation; nevertheless, I always ask young journalists, above all, not to stop dreaming, not to surrender their dreams of changing the world. Imagine what it would be like if all the journalists decided to do journalism because we want things to change and improve,” she said.

Cristina Avila-Zesatti has rejected money offered for projects which, in her words, “what they want is for me to tell only about the violence in this country, but I do not want to tell only that part of my country. My country is violent and it is raping every day, but there is another part that we need to listen to, count and rescue, and that almost nobody wants to hear.”

She explained that the mass media incites frustration, fear and, therefore, an internal war, which will end up transforming into an external war, whether personal, family or social. We need another kind of journalism that can collaborate which what is peaceful and to face the world in a non-violent way.

“I believe in the power of the word. In my beginnings in journalism I dreamed of being a war correspondent and, in the end, I became a correspondent of peace. I look at the darkest part of the world from its most luminous side, and that part we all have, both personally and socially, and I still believe that the word has the choice between immensely healing or immensely destroying,” she added.

Tireless Activist

Cristina Ávila-Zesatti is a tireless activist. She rescues animals. She has earned a degree in Communication Sciences from the Universidad del Valle de Atemajac, a master’s degree in Documentary Drama from the Universidad Complutense de Madrid and a degree in Culture of Peace from the Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona.

For her pacifist activism she has received national and international awards from the Madrid Press Association in Spain; the Friedrich Ebert Foundation in Germany, and the Supreme Court of Justice (SCJN) in Mexico.

Cristina Ávila-Zesatti has given lectures and workshops in Mexico, Spain, Colombia and the United States; was editor in the Channel TV6, of Guadalajara; producer on Telemundo in western Mexico; producer and publisher of International News for Cable News Network (CNN); head of correspondents for NBC-Telemundo International, as well as associate producer in documentaries for MS-NBC Investigatives, Canadian Television and ARD German Public Television.

In 2003-2006 she dedicated herself to research journalism in Belgium, France and Spain, in social issues, and was a collaborator of the Mexican weekly journals Day Seven and Eme-Equis, among other publications.

Currently she edits Corresponsal de Paz on the Internet, which has an average of 30 thousand readers per month, with visits from more than 70 countries on five continents.

Brazil: Community mediation centers begin to work in Recife and Olinda

. . DEMOCRATIC PARTICIPATION . .

An article from Diario de Pernambuco (translated by CPNN)

The conflict mediators trained by the Secretariat of Justice and Rights (SJDH) began to work in two conflict mediation centers opened in the districts of Rio Doce in Olinda and Bomba do Hemetério in Recife. The spaces are part of a set of eight that will be implemented in six districts of the metropolitan region and managed by four Non-Government Organizations (NGOs), with the support of the State Government through the SJDH, and the Conflict Mediation Program of the Executive Secretariat of Rights Human Rights (SEDH). The partnership was signed on July 18 with the NGO’s, Collective Mulher Vida, Grupo Ruas and Praças, Cáritas Brasileira NE2 and Grupo Adolescer.


Seminar for Community Conflict Mediators in Recife

The Bomba do Hemetério community nucleus is in operation at the Giganda do Samba, at Rua das Pedras. The space, managed by Cáritas Brasileira NE2, has four mediators and offers initial assistance on Monday from 8am to 1pm and on Friday from 2pm to 5pm. It is necessary for the interested party to present their identity card and inform the contact telephone number. After an initial evaluation, the mediation will be scheduled.

(article continued in right column)

(Click here for the original article in Portuguese)

Discussion question

Mediation as a tool for nonviolence and culture of peace

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In Rio Doce, the community nucleus works at the Composer Antônio Maria Polyvalent School, located at Avenida Acácias. In the space, which is managed by the Collective Mulher Vida, the service is carried out by three mediators, on Wednesday from 9am to 11am, and on Friday, from 2pm to 4pm. Those interested must attend the place with photo identification and proof of residence.

Santo Amaro is the next neighborhood to have a center inaugurated. This Tuesday, at 13h, the Adolescent Nucleus opens the doors for the population. On Thursday it is the turn of the Grupo Ruas and Praças to start serving the community. The inauguration of the space happens at 13.30.

The mediators underwent training lasting 40 hours of classes, taught between July 18 and August 08 by the technical team of the Conflict Mediation Program of SEDH, formed by a psychologist, social worker and lawyer. Among the topics covered in the training were human rights, culture of peace, conflicts, community mediation, the role of mediator and the social assistance network.

Mexico: Tlalnepantla initiates program of Youth for a Culture of Peace

EDUCATION FOR PEACE .

An article by Huellas de Mexico (translated by CPNN)

Mayor Denisse Ugalde Alegría has launched the program “Youth for a Culture of Peace”, which provides for the painting of murals with different messages in more than 120 public spaces to raise public awareness of the importance of promoting a healthy coexistence through positive actions.


A mural in Tlalnepantla

Speaking to more than 100 young people who gathered in the municipal esplanade, Denise Ugalde stressed that their participation is fundamental for the development of this municipality, as they represent 30 percent of the population.

She announced that starting on September 29 the city will implement the program “Drive for life, Drive for peace”, aimed at reducing the number of car accidents due to alcohol.

She said that according to statistics of the Pan American Health Organization, Mexico ranks seventh in the world in deaths from road accidents involving young people between 15 and 29 years of age, hence the challenge of the 2016-2018 administration is to raise public awareness about this problem.

(continued in right column)

(Click here for the original Spanish version of this article.)

Question for this article:

Do the arts create a basis for a culture of peace?, What is, or should be, their role in our movement?

(continued from left column)

Alejandra Rangel Díaz, director of the Municipal Institute for Youth, explained that the program “Youth for a Culture of Peace” was born from a project of several areas of the administration that seek to spread healthy coexistence between people through different activities.

She explained that on the instructions of the municipal president, the murals should carry short messages and images that promote a culture of peace, such as respect for people, animals and care for the environment.

She added that with the support of the Social Communication Coordination, to date 60 murals have been painted throughout the municipal territory, in which young people can freely express themselves, thus contributing to crime prevention.

She stressed that private initiatives have also joined in this project, providing their respective fences so that the people of Tlalnepantlenses can express themselves and thereby prevent them from falling into misconduct.

The municipal official said that this program is in addition to the nearly 100 events that were held on the occasion of the Youth Month, including a speech contest, a forum on human rights, sexual diversity talks, gender equity and participation youth policy.

In this event, attended by Eunice Santos, coordinator of Social Communication; Rubén Omar Herosa, representative of the Regional Red Cross; and Alejandra Rizo, president of Santa Monica Scouts; the artist, Antonio García Mendoza “AKO”, indicated that all the murals contain elements that besides promoting peace, convey a sense of identity and belonging.

It should be noted that as part of the program,”Youth for a Culture of Peace”, it is contemplated to give a new image to outdoor theaters, among them, the Algarabía, which soon will have a mural that will be selected through a contest.

Brazil: Agrestina organizes first Culture of Peace Meeting

. . DEMOCRATIC PARTICIPATION . .

by Helena Lourenço

At a meeting on August 25 in Agrestina (Pernambuco, Brazil), representatives from nine communities agreed to create a provisional commision that will lead to the formation of a Culture of Peace Council in the region of Agreste.


Photo by Jocelim Valdemar / Decom – PMA

The event was held by the Women’s Thematic Chamber of the Agreste and Mata Sul Municipalities Consortium
 
Among those present were the coordinator of the Women’s Chamber of Comaqsul and regional coordinator of the Central Agreste of the State Women’s Secretariat, Betânia Ribeiro, Agrestina’s Secretary of Public Policies for Women, Emilia Alves, the president of the Brazilian Association of Women Folklore Festivals of Brazil – ABRASOFFA, Helena Lourenço, the representative of the Public Policy Managers for Women in the Agreste Central Region, Claudia Roberta, the mayor of Lagoa dos Gatos, Edmilson Moraes, and the invited speaker, David Adams.

The theme of the speech by Dr. Adams was: The Culture of Peace and Non-Violence. He spoke out of his experience as the Director of the United Nations International Year for the Culture of Peace (2000). During the international year, 75 million people worldwide, 15 million of them in Brazil, signed the Manifesto 2000, as part of the initiative to promote a culture of peace. This shows a great awareness of the need to change our culture for a change of culture of peace, “he said.

(Article continued in right column)

(Click here for a Portuguese version of this article)

Questions related to this article:

 

How can culture of peace be developed at the municipal level?

(Article continued from left column)

The proposal of the culture of peace seeks alternatives and solutions to these issues that afflict humanity as a whole, focuses not on the issue of violence, but on peace as a social state of dignity where everything can be preserved and respected. These points are one of the great challenges of building a culture of peace.

According to the United Nations, the culture of peace has eight aspects:
1. Education for a culture of peace. Tolerance and solidarity3. Democratic participation 4. Flow of information 5. Disarmament 6. Human rights 7. Sustainable development 8. Equality of gender

Dr. Adams said that “It is necessary to replace the culture of war with a culture of peace. This can be done by cities because they have no need for nuclear weapons, there is no need for war culture.

The speaker concluded that he has a dream to see Brazil recognized for spreading the culture of peace. “Brazil will be known worldwide for being a country that seeks a culture of peace, thanks to the young people who go to communities and favelas to work and learn about a culture of peace.

According to UNESCO, the culture of peace “is intrinsically related to the prevention and non-violent resolution of conflicts” and is based on the principles of tolerance, solidarity, respect for life, individual rights and pluralism. This discussion is strengthened by the growing vision of universal responsibility for the construction of a new world and places this theme as one of the main educational actions that promote effective sources of peace in the world.

COMAGSUL – It is the Consortium of Agreste and Mata Sul Municipalities and was born of the common needs between Agreste and Mata Sul municipalities, with populations below 70,000 inhabitants. The consortium’s mission is to promote regional integration, foster the socioeconomic and cultural development of Agreste and Mata Sul de Pernambuco, as well as strengthen Municipal Management through joint actions, seeking the exchange of experiences and cost reduction of public services management between two or more municipalities that are part of the consortium. Currently, the group of municipalities consortium is of 22 municipalities.

Two examples of Participatory Budgeting in Brazil

. . DEMOCRATIC PARTICIPATION . .

By the coordinator of the CPNN

I recently visited two cities in Brazil, Santos and Caruaru, where participatory budgeting is being practiced.

Participatory budgeting is an important instrument for promoting democratic participation, as it allows the citizen to debate and define the future of a city. In it, the population decides the priorities of investments in works and services to be realized each year, with the resources of the budget of the city hall. In addition, it encourages the exercise of citizenship, the commitment of the population to the public good and the co-responsibility between government and society on the management of the city.

Here are two examples.

Santos, Brazil: Participative Budget has already received 43 thousand votes

An article from the City of Santos

About 43 thousand people have already expressed their views on the priorities that the City Hall should adopt for 2018, through the Participatory Budget process. Next week, the total should reach 50 thousand participations (more than four times the goal, of 12 thousand, established in the PDR – Direct Participation in Results).

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(Click here for the original article in Portuguese)

Discussion question

Participatory budgeting, How does it work?

(article continued from left column)

An Ombudsman team was present today at the UME Auxiliadora da Instrucção, in Macuco, for elementary students to vote on the benefits they expect for Education. Teams were also present at the health units, street markets and supermarkets.

To vote, click here. Just enter, identify the neighborhood where you live and vote. The alternatives are provided within the fields of Citizenship and Social Action, Culture, Sports and Tourism, Environment, Public Services, Education, Health and Urban Mobility. You can choose one option in each of them.

* * * * * * * *

Caruaru, Brazil: Municipality to launch an application for popular participation

An article from Te Amo Caruaru

On Friday (25), the Secretariat for Planning, Budget and Management will hold a public hearing for the General Consolidation of “Mobiliza Caruaru”, in the auditorium of the Shopping Center Difusora, at 9:00 am, attended by the mayor of Caruaru, Raquel Lyra.

The main purpose is to show citizens the final result of the nine public sessions held in the Agreste capital, four in the rural area and five in the urban area. This process contributes to the structuring of municipal budget planning, which also includes the Budgetary Guidelines Law and the Annual Budget Law for 2018. The multi-year plan will be forwarded to the City Council by October 05, according to the legislation.

At that time, the application “Mobiliza Caruaru” will also be presented, initially available for Android phones. This mobile application will be another tool for the population to interact, as well as consolidate participatory and collaborative processes between the municipal government and civil society and its various organizations.

Mexico City reinforces the dissemination of participatory budgeting

.. DEMOCRATIC PARTICIPATION ..

An article from Milenio Diario, dated May 28.

Autonomous organizations and secretariats of the Government of the City of Mexico have joined the campaign of dissemination of the Capital Electoral Institute to promote the Citizen Consultation on Participatory Budgeting 2018.


Councilors of the Capital Electoral Institute will have the support of agencies and agencies of the Government of Mexico City in the dissemination of the Citizen Consultation on Participatory Budgeting 2018 (Cinthya Stettin)

During a meeting in the facilities of that electoral body, some of the dissemination actions that were carried out were detailed:

– Placing a banner on their respective websites with information about the Citizen Consultation.

– Installation of posters about the initiative in visible places of those institutions.

– Informational talks on the subject given to staff

– Placement of itinerant modules for the registration of projects within the facilities of these agencies and secretariats.

In order to encourage project registration, the dynamic of #TuPresupuestoChallenge will be activated, which means that all staff memberrs of a unit can registerr citizen projects. Also a video will launch a challenge to other units, so that they perform the same activity, in order to replicate it and generate more citizen proposals.

(continued in right column)

Questions for this article:

Participatory budgeting, How does it work?

(continued from left column)

Meanwhile, electoral councilor Pablo Lezama said that “for this citizen exercise, the goal is to have better registered projects and to insure that citizens receive all the information necessary to participate actively.”

He explained that IEDF staff has worked to establish better coordination and lines of action with local institutions to ensure that citizens receive adequate information about this exercise of democratic participation.

The meeting was attended by judges from the Capital Electoral Tribunal and representatives of the local Human Rights Commission as well as the Institute of Transparency, Access to Public Information, Protection of Personal Data and Accountability.

Likewise, the various local secretariats of Urban Development and Housing are added to this initiative; including Economic Development; Environment; Works and Services; Social Development; Health; Finance; Public Security; Civil Protection; Labor and Employment Promotion; and Science and Technology and Innovation.

Others In addition include the Comptroller of Mexico City, the Urban Management Agency, the Institute for the Integration of People with Disabilities, the System for Integral Family Development, the Attorney General’s Office and the Legal and Legal Services Council

Lezama added that last year they received around 20 thousand proposals in 30 days. For this year the deadline has been extended to almost 100 days for this activity, which expires on July 14.

He informed that the projects could be registered in person in any of the 40 district addresses of the IEDF and online in the page of that body election.

(Click here for the original Spanish article.)

Mexico: Authorities agree on actions to prevent violence against women

. . WOMEN’S EQUALITY . .

An article from La Razón (translated by CPNN)

The Undersecretary for Human Rights of the Ministry of the Interior, Roberto Campa Cifrián, met with members of the National Network of Women for a Life Free of Violence in order to follow up on the commitments made by the Government of the Republic to prevent and eradicate violence against women.

The Undersecretary, along with the president of INMujeres, Lorena Cruz, and the National Commissioner for the Prevention and Eradication of Violence against Women (CONAVIM), Alejandra Negrete Morayta, discussed, among other things, inconsistencies between the existing regulations and the General Law of Women’s Access to a Life Free of Violence.

(article continued in right column)

(click here for the original Spanish version of this article.)

Question related to this article:

Protecting women and girls against violence, Is progress being made?

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In this regard, the members of the National Network proposed to set up a multidisciplinary task force for the Mechanism of Alert of Gender Violence against Women (AVGM), composed of experts from the ALV, CONAVIM, INMujeres, the National Security Commission, Commissioner of the UN, CONAGO, CONAPRED, CEAV and PGR, in order to ensure the right of women to a life free of violence and to follow up on the governmental actions directed to the entities and municipalities concerned by the AVGM.

They also proposed the installation of a mechanism to monitor the alerts by the civil society in order to assess the implementation of the process; the creation of a Specialized Human Rights Prosecutor’s Office, with broad powers to punish severely any authorities responsible for the impunity of feminicidal violence in Mexico.

They also proposed considering the incorporation of some human rights defenders from the alert process into the Protection Mechanism for Human Rights Defenders and Journalists to safeguard their integrity and security.

Undersecretary Campa Cifrián, the head of INMujeres, Cruz Sánchez, and CONAVIM commissioner Negrete Morayta endorsed the government’s provision and offered to follow up on the proposals submitted, reflecting the commitment of the Government of the Republic to women and their right to a life free of violence.

Women’s Council for Peace in Colombia created by indigenous women

. . WOMEN’S EQUALITY . .

An article from FILAC – The Fund for the Development of the Indigenous Peoples of Latin America and the Caribbean

Seeking greater political participation and with the intention of working for peace, especially in their community, but also in the country, the indigenous women of Colombia have created a Council of Women for Peace.


(Click on photo to enlarge)

In Colombia, women belonging to the indigenous peoples of the region consider that they have had to face “armed conflict, psychological violence” and even “conflicts in their home”, according to Margarita Rodríguez, an indigenous representative.
 
The council in question was presented along with appropriate rituals and the name Conamic, National Council of Women of Colombia. The group includes representatives of the 10 Colombian indigenous peoples and will immerse itself in the world of politics with the intention of generating peace.

(Article continued in the right column)

Question for this article

Do women have a special role to play in the peace movement?

(Article continued from the left column)

In Colombia there are more than two million indigenous people belonging to 102 villages, according to the National Indigenous Organization of Colombia, known by its acronym ONIC.
 
Margarita belongs to the Sikuani people. During the meeting in which they made the council official, she revealed that they have been meeting since 2013 and emphasized that it is not a last minute decision, but something that they have been working for and thinking about for some time.
 
Nasa, Pasto, Tanacona, Sikuani, Misak, Emberá, Wayú, Arhuaco, Pijao and Yeral are the names of the ten peoples that make up this council of Colombian indigenous women.
 
For them, the participation and empowerment of women is important, considering the violent situations in which they have been involved, and especially if it is about achieving peace, said Ivonne González, director of human rights at the Ministry of Interior. She added that “having a group of indigenous women today is fundamental because the activism of women was what led to a gender subcommittee in the Havana agreements.”
 
For her part, a council representative present at the Conamic initiation ritual said that “respect for the life, integrity and security of all women is a fundamental duty of the country. We do not want women killed in our territories or outside them.”

(Click here for the Spanish original of this article.)

Latin America Is it possible to develop peace through tourism?

. . SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT . .

An article from Aleteia

Latin American cities will meet to discuss strategies for the generation of peace. The meeting of the Latin American Congress of Tourist Cities will be held with the theme “Building peace from tourism” in the Colombian city of Cartagena de Indias in October.

Between the 25th and 27th of that month, representatives of several countries of the region, united in the Latin American Federation of Tourist Cities – presided over by Paraguay until the year 2020 – will have as an objective to generate a space of integration between the tourist cities of Latin America .

The goal will be “the collective construction of strategies for the generation of peace through tourism based on the socialization of their experiences and good practices”, according to the website of the congress . It will be an instance of reflection from the cultures of the Latin American peoples to establish what they can do to rediscover themselves based on identity and tradition.

This federation, which was born in 2011 in the Peruvian city of Arequipa, includes the countries of Chile, Peru, Brazil, Paraguay, Ecuador, Colombia, Argentina and Uruguay.

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(Click here for the Spanish version)

Question related to this article:

How can tourism promote a culture of peace?

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The country where these aims will be discussed in the near future is nothing more or less than Colombia, a place in the region where the word peace has been resonating for a long time due to various events such as those linked to the peace pact with the guerrillas and the award to its president Juan Manuel Santos of the Nobel Peace Prize.

In addition, this place, shortly before, will be one of the cities that will host Pope Francisco during his visit to the country in September this year.

In this regard, the Vatican recently spoke on the subject of sustainable tourism giving its clear support for the first time in the framework of the Church’s message for the 2017 World Tourism Day. The Church promotes initiatives that put tourism at the service of the integral development of the person. This is in line with its contribution to peace.

Nor is the religious aspect exempt from the projects of this federation. For example, in the early days of August, the Latin American Symposium on Local Religious History was held in Valparaíso, Chile, where an initiative called “Ruta de la Fe” was discussed, an idea that seeks to integrate religious tourism destinations in Latin America.

The Congress scheduled for October comes at a time when in several cities of the world there is talk of violence and hatred against tourists. This happens in several countries like Mexico, Germany and Spain.

For example, in Barcelona masked youth punctured the wheels of a tourist bus, and in the district of Kreuzberg (Berlin) some bars hang a sign in the door: “No service to tourists” according to a recent report by Macelo López Cambronero to Aleteia.

At this time the reflection on the construction of peace from tourism appears especially timely and healthy.