I must confess that I am neither a blogger nor an author. Every post that I upload here is I received from my friends via email and I implemented this blog as a compilation of various kind of posts which I can read everything in one sit at the same time. And then I would love to share with all my friends. In addition to,this blog is my tiny online library. Please drop in to this blog if you find time & I hope you will get something by dropping in. Thanks in anticipation. May God Bless you!
Visit www.hostdrjack.com CLICK HERE! Two friends were walking through the desert. During some point of the journey, they had an argument, and one friend slapped the other in the face. The one who got slapped was hurt, but without saying anything wrote in the sand:
Today my best friend slapped me in the face. They kept on walking until they found an oasis, where they decided to take a bath. The one who had been slapped got stuck in the mire and started drowning—but the friend saved him. After he recovered from the near-drowning, he wrote on a stone:
Today my best friend saved my life.
The friend who had slapped and saved his best friend asked him, "After I hurt you, you wrote in the sand and now, you write on a stone. Why?"
The other friend replied: "When someone hurts us, we should write it down in sand where winds of forgiveness can erase it away. But, when someone does something good for us, we must engrave it in stone where no wind can ever erase it.
Learn to write your hurts in the sand and to carve your benefits in stone.
NEW YORK, 20 November 2007 -- On the occasion of the 18th anniversary of the adoption of the Convention on the Rights of the Child, author and former child soldier Ishmael Beah was today appointed UNICEF Advocate for Children Affected by War.
The appointment was made by UNICEF's Executive Director, Ann M. Veneman, at a launch at UNICEF's New York headquarters.
"Ishmael Beah speaks on behalf of young people around the world whose childhoods have been scarred by violence, deprivation, and other violations of their rights," said Veneman. "He is an eloquent symbol of hope for young victims of violence, as well as those working to demobilize and rehabilitate children caught up in armed conflict."
"As a child soldier, your rights are constantly violated," said Beah, who was forcibly recruited in his native Sierra Leone when he was only 13. More than two years later UNICEF negotiated with warlords for the release of Beah and other child combatants and placed him in a rehabilitation programme.
Eventually, Beah found his way to New York and finished his education. His childhood memoir, A Long Way Gone, became an international bestseller and through the book, lectures and speaking engagements, he has given the world a better understanding of the life of a child soldier.
"For many observers, a child who has known nothing but war, a child for whom the Kalashnikov is the only way to make a living and for whom the bush is the most welcoming community, is a child lost forever for peace and development. I contest this view," Beah said. "For the sake of these children it is essential to prove that another life is possible."
The announcement of Beah's appointment coincides with the 18th anniversary of the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), an international treaty created to help prevent the kind of suffering that he endured. Today is also the day when the first of the generation of children born after the creation of the treaty reach adulthood.
The Convention was approved by the UN General Assembly on 20 November 1989. It sets the ground rules for a better life for all children, and is the most widely ratified human rights agreement in the world. The rights it identifies include the right to survival, the right to be protected from harmful influences, abuse and exploitation, and the right to participate fully in family, cultural and social life.
The CRC has become a universally accepted measure of global responsibilities regarding children and an effective tool for promoting conditions and circumstances favourable to children's survival and development.