World Vision Dialogue - Building a new collective dream


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  • CALLtoACTION: Genocide of the Innocent in Niger Delta
  • NEW WORLD VISION: Putting Our Differences to Work
  • LEADERSHIP: Taking a Stand on Zimbabwe
  • WORLD VISION: Embracing Lessons Learned
  • AFRICA: Opportunity to Lead the Way - Great Britain
  • The Christmas Spirit from the Heart of Biafra
  • Standing In Peace
  • THE POWER of A NEW WORLD VISION
  • Start Building a New World in Your Mind
  • NIGERIA: Lessons learned from a Shameful Journey

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CALLtoACTION: Genocide of the Innocent in Niger Delta

Help Building a new collective dream of a better world begins by first mobilizing our collective will to make things right for all people. It begins with all of us standing up for our neighbors, especially when we see them being brutally victimized and murdered while we stand by.

On May 20, 2009, Dr. Emmanuel Enekwechi, Prime Minister of Biafra Government in Exile issued a compelling plea for help to the people of the world, which I have posted below. This anguished call-to-action recounts the ongoing inhuman conditions, robbery, slaughter of innocent civilians, and other injustices in the Niger Delta by the Nigerian Military. Are you in a position to help?

Dr. Enekwechi's plea has takes on new and deeper meaning, when you consider President Barack Obama's powerful setting of the stage for a new world vision --- a new beginning across the world when he reminded us of these truths:

"For human history has often been a record of nations and tribes subjugating one another to serve their own interests. Yet in this new age, such attitudes are self-defeating. Given our interdependence, any world order that elevates one nation or group of people over another will inevitably fail. So whatever we think of the past, we must not be prisoners of it. Our problems must be dealt with through partnership; progress must be shared.

I do have an unyielding belief that all people yearn for certain things: the ability to speak your mind and have a say in how you are governed; confidence in the rule of law and the equal administration of justice; government that is transparent and doesn't steal from the people; the freedom to live as you choose. Those are not just American ideas, they are human rights, and that is why we will support them everywhere."

On May 20, 2009, Dr. Emmanuel Enekwechi, Prime Minister of Biafra Government in Exile issued a compelling plea for help to the people of the world, which I have posted below. This anguished call-to-action recounts the ongoing inhuman conditions, robbery, slaughter of innocent civilians, and other injustices in the Niger Delta by the Nigerian Military.

Dr. Enekwechi asks the people of the world --- the governments of the world --- to take notice...to look within our spans of influence to come to the aid of the Biafran people. Can you help?  

 

EGIE


Nigerian Military Murdering Civilians in the Niger Delta, May 17 2009:
Biafra Government in Exile (BGIE) Position Statement

_______________________________________
May 20, 2009

BGIE decries the recent and ongoing military expedition of Nigeria’s Armed Forces in the Niger Delta region starting this past week, which predictably has resulted in the indiscriminate killing of a large number of unarmed civilians, destruction of their homes and property, and the displacement and dislocation of hundreds of thousands of hapless men, women, children, youth, and elderly of the Niger Delta.

BGIE strongly condemns this crime by Nigeria, a crime against the people of Biafra and against humanity. Since the end of the Nigeria Biafra war in 1970 the Nigerian government has habitually and systematically been slaughtering innocent men, women, and children in Biafra and sacking towns and villages using its armed forces. Sadly the world has kept quiet. The Nigerian government, aware that the world will remain silent and not pay attention and using her lobbying firms to shield these atrocities from the news media, will continue with impunity its genocidal policy and actions against Biafrans.

However, BGIE expects men and women of goodwill of the world to finally take notice of the operative State policy of Nigeria which institutionalizes the rape of the Niger Delta and ongoing genocide against Biafrans. Nigeria Government Decrees: “Petroleum Resources Decree, 1969”; “Land Use Decree #6, 1978”; and “National Inland Waterways Decree #13, 1997,” unilaterally and incontestably took away the land, mineral resources and water resources and other property ownership and management rights of the peoples of the Niger Delta and Biafra without consultation or consent. Not only has the State of Nigeria impounded these resources from their rightful owners, but also the Nigerian military and political oligarchs have used the enormous financial resources accruing from these resources to amass huge financial fortunes for themselves while the rightful owners of the land and resources have been condemned to a life of poverty, misery, squalor, and privation. To add salt to injury, whatever is left after the oligarchs have looted the treasury they use to develop other parts of Nigeria while neglecting the Niger Delta, Biafra Region; all to the calculated, pernicious detriment of the Niger Delta and Biafra. The Niger Delta problem is not a “development problem.” It is a “justice problem.” Restore the land, mineral and water resources to the rightful owners and the Niger Delta problem will end very quickly. 
BGIE expects courageous and practical people of the world to acknowledge the fact that the UN has adopted a principle that will be the centerpiece of the goal of restoring peace, security and stability to the region. In adopting Resolution A/61/295 supporting Self Determination of nations, races and peoples, the UN provided a mechanism for oppressed peoples and those, like the Niger Delta and Biafra, who are threatened by a failed and brutal State such as the State of Nigeria, to regain control of their respective destinies and dignity. 

While still reeling from the shock of the current Nigeria’s bloody attack on innocent and unarmed civilians of the Niger Delta, BGIE hereby dutifully offers a practical and effective way out of the quandary: the UN Self Determination resolution ought to be applied to the situation in Nigeria. We urge the peoples and nations in Nigeria to take this UN Resolution seriously and press their respective Self Determination agenda. We urge the people, governments and institutions of the world to respect and support this Self Determination agenda for the people of Biafra and for peace in the Niger Delta. Thus, we can all invest in, and harvest, peace and stability in the region, while saving the lives of innocent humanity; thus, we can stop the ongoing second wave of genocide on the people of Biafra by Nigeria.

Signed:

Dr. Emmanuel Enekwechi
Prime Minister, Biafra Government in Exile (BGIE)

Friday, June 05, 2009 at 08:13 PM | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack (0)

Tags: Current Affairs, Nigeria, President Obama

NEW WORLD VISION: Putting Our Differences to Work

PODTW-SKG-ExhibitCreating a new world vision begins with each of us. There continues to be many signs of NEW HOPE that stand before us. We are realizing on many fronts how much we can do together when we work in the spirit of oneness.
Barack Obama's Inauguration Day was a moment of collective change and possibility for all of us as we proved we can be in peace and harmony. We do know how. Still there is more than just showing up for one day. How can we multiply that same reality in our day-to-day living? What does it mean to put our differences to work? What does it mean to you?

Bay Area Artist, Sally K. Green helps us celebrate our many dimensions of difference as individuals in her collective portrait of our human story. Emerging from her Faces in the Neighborhood Series, she helps us look at ourselves and think about what it means inside us. Putting Our Differences to Work Art Exhibit is a self-learning exhibit now showing at the online KNOWLEDGE GALLERY at the Global Dialogue Center.  It was originally debuted live at a special event at the well-known Grace Cathedral, the house of prayer for all people in June 2008.

The exhibit also has a story. Sally describes it this way ... 

Sally-green-hat “This exhibit grew out of my “Faces in the Neighborhood” series. The idea was inspired by a long-held dream Debbe Kennedy and I have had as life-long friends: to put our writing and painting together in some meaningful way.”

Take a tour...ponder the points of view; share your own...

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. 
left his wisdom about the possiblities for a new world vision
that will start from within us...
 

Now let us rededicate ourselves to the long and bitter ----
but beautiful ----struggle for a new world.
...Shall we say that the odds are too great?
Shall we tell them the struggle is too hard?
The choice is ours, and though we might prefer it otherwise
we must choose in this crucial moment of history.

As James Russell Lowell, eloquently stated [in the Boston Courier
on December 11, 1945 as poem protesting America's war with Mexico
]...

Once to every man and nation,
Comes a moment to decide...

Thank you, Sally K. Green for your gift to us and for a long and worthy friendship.

For those who visit, I hope you will share your thoughts about what it means to you.

Best...
Debbe

debbe kennedy
founder, president and CEO
Global Dialogue Center and
Leadership Solutions Companies
www.globaldialoguecenter.com

9781576754993lpodtw
www.puttingourdifferencestowork.com

Putting Our Differences to Work 

The
Fastest Way to Innovation, Leadership and High Performance
by Debbe Kennedy
 ▪ Berrett-Koehler ▪ Hardcover
Futurist Joel Barker's VIDEO BOOK REVIEW and PRIMER


Sunday, February 08, 2009 at 03:00 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Tags: Art, Books, Differences, Innovation

LEADERSHIP: Taking a Stand on Zimbabwe

ScalesCreating a better world for all sometimes means stepping up to courageously take a stand. Much of the problems we face today exist because most of us sit idly by waiting for others to make the badly needed changes that are piling up. Changes that impact lives and the future of all people.

Dr. Emmanuel Enekwechi Prime Minister, Biafra Government in Exile (BGIE) recently set the example for us all through his leadership message on behalf of the Government Federation of Biafra...

Biafrasmall_3   

July 1, 2008

In the matter of the recent political and social events in Zimbabwe and its handling, the Biafra Government in Exile (BGIE) which represents the people of Biafra, their political hopes and aspirations, declares thus:

1) On behalf of the people of Biafra, BGIE regrets the actions of the ruling party in Zimbabwe in the conduct of what could not pass for free and fair elections.

2) BGIE condemns the government of Zimbabwe and the ruling party for the violence unleashed on the hapless people of Zimbabwe whose only "offense" was to make their political will known using the customary vehicle of suffrage.

3) Africa should hold Robert Mugabe personally and criminally liable for this gratuitous violence against the innocent people of Zimbabwe—his own people.

4) Africa should also hold criminally responsible as accessories all other persons, co-operators, and agents of Robert Mugabe, his political party and his administration, and members of State Institutions under his command who have participated in any way in the harming of the citizenry of Zimbabwe.

5) BGIE chides African Union (AU) for acquiescence in the face of brutality and battery of innocent Africans of Zimbabwe; and for failure to condemn injustice, denial of freedom, and flagrant violation of every principle of democratic election and democratic rule.

It is the hope of BGIE that the obvious fraudulent results of the recent sham elections in Zimbabwe be overturned and that Robert Mugabe and his collaborators be held accountable. 

Signed:

Dr. Emmanuel Enekwechi
Prime Minister, Biafra Government in Exile (BGIE)

Wednesday, July 09, 2008 at 03:05 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Tags: Africa, leadership, Zimbabwe

WORLD VISION: Embracing Lessons Learned

Peacesymbol_1

RELATED PODCAST:
Oguchi Nkwocha, M. D., Igbo visionary from Biafra/south-eastern Nigeria, joins Debbe Kennedy, founder of the Global Dialogue Center to share his thoughts and wisdom, exchanging ideas on creating a new VISION for our WORLD, becoming a visionary ourselves, the role of personal responsibility and how we can become part of the oneness of the full world. Listen now  59:30

Dear Friends,

As we look within ourselves for a new, loving and more generous vision to manifest for our world and planet, it seems important to consider lessons learned ---- to look closely at the responsibility we hold for one another's well-being.

Secretary general of the United Nations, Kofi A. Annan offers us a compelling timeless reflection to consider. We share it with you...

FIVE LESSONS I HAVE LEARNED
by Kofi A. Annan, Secretary General of the United Nations
Monday, December 11, 2006

Nearly 50 years ago, when I arrived in Minnesota as a student fresh from Africa, I had much to learn -- starting with the fact that there is nothing wimpish about wearing earmuffs when it is 15 degrees below zero. All my life since has been a learning experience. Now I want to pass on five lessons I have learned during 10 years as secretary general of the United Nations that I believe the community of nations needs to learn as it confronts the challenges of the 21st century.

First, in today's world we are all responsible for each other's security.
Against such threats as nuclear proliferation, climate change, global pandemics or terrorists operating from safe havens in failed states, no nation can make itself secure by seeking supremacy over all others. Only by working to make each other secure can we hope to achieve lasting security for ourselves. This responsibility includes our shared responsibility to protect people from genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity. That was accepted by all nations at last year's U.N.
summit. But when we look at the murder, rape and starvation still being inflicted on the people of Darfur, we realize that such doctrines remain pure rhetoric unless those with the power to intervene effectively -- by exerting political, economic or, in the last resort, military muscle -- are prepared to take the lead. It also includes a responsibility to future generations to preserve resources that belong to them as well as to us. Every day that we do nothing, or too little, to prevent climate change imposes higher costs on our children.

Second, we are also responsible for each other's welfare.
Without a measure of solidarity, no society can be truly stable. It is not realistic to think that some people can go on deriving great benefits from globalization while billions of others are left in, or thrown into, abject poverty. We have to give all our fellow human beings at least a chance to share in our prosperity.

Third, both security and prosperity depend on respect for human rights and the rule of law. Throughout history human life has been enriched by diversity, and different communities have learned from each other. But if our communities are to live in peace we must stress also what unites us: our common humanity and the need for our human dignity and rights to be protected by law.

That is vital for development, too. Both foreigners and a country's own citizens are more likely to invest when their basic rights are protected and they know they will be fairly treated under the law. Policies that genuinely favor development are more likely to be adopted if the people most in need of development can make their voice heard. States need to play by the rules toward each other, as well. No community suffers from too much rule of law; many suffer from too little -- and the international community is among them.

My fourth lesson, therefore, is that governments must be accountable for their actions, in the international as well as the domestic arena. Every state owes some account to other states on which its actions have a decisive impact. As things stand, poor and weak states are easily held to account, because they need foreign aid. But large and powerful states, whose actions have the greatest impact on others, can be constrained only by their own people.

That gives the people and institutions of powerful states a special responsibility to take account of global views and interests. And today they need to take into account also what we call "non-state actors." States can no longer -- if they ever could -- confront global challenges alone. Increasingly, they need help from the myriad types of association in which people come together voluntarily, to profit or to think about, and change, the world.

How can states hold each other to account? Only through multilateral institutions. So my final lesson is that those institutions must be organized in a fair and democratic way, giving the poor and the weak some influence over the actions of the rich and the strong.

Developing countries should have a stronger voice in international financial institutions, whose decisions can mean life or death for their people. New permanent or long-term members should be added to the U.N. Security Council, whose current membership reflects the reality of 1945, not of today.

No less important, all the Security Council's members must accept the responsibility that comes with their privilege. The council is not a stage for acting out national interests. It is the management committee of our fledgling global security system.

More than ever, Americans, like the rest of humanity, need a functioning global system. Experience has shown, time and again, that the system works poorly when the United States remains aloof but it functions much better when there is farsighted U.S. leadership.

That gives American leaders of today and tomorrow a great responsibility.
The American people must see that they live up to it.

The writer, Kofi A. Annan, secretary general of the United Nations, will leave office December 31, 2006 This article is based on an address he will give today at the Truman Presidential Museum & Library in Independence, Mo.

Sunday, May 25, 2008 at 09:05 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Tags: government, peace, responsibility, world vision

AFRICA: Opportunity to Lead the Way - Great Britain

Spiral3Two messages arrived from Chukwuji Ogbonna and Ethelbert Nwobi and I wanted to share my response with all of you. Read my original post and their responding messages.

No one knows the angst of Biafrans except for Biafrans themselves, as my fellow Biafrans, Chukwuji Ogbonna and Ethelbert Nwobi remind us all in their “Lamentations.” It is not just collective anguish with a capital “A”: such torment in fact feeds down the arteries and veins and umbilical cord down to the individual being, yes, through the capillaries down to the individual biological cell. At once collective and personal, such torment of Biafrans is total—systemic, organic: thorough. No one knows the true angst of the unfathomably oppressed. “Unfathomable,” because, there is no conceivable reason why Biafra and Biafrans should remain oppressed by Britain and Nigeria today—nor in the past, for that matter. So, allow Chukwuji and Ethelbert to ventilate.

While hopeful that “…setting the peoples of Africa free is one of the reasons why Great Britain has voted in favour of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of the Indigenous Peoples…” (referring to UN General Assembly A/RES/61/295 of September 12/13, 2007; document A/61/L.67; (http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2007/ga10612.doc.htm); (http://www1.umn.edu/humanrts/instree/declaration.html); http://daccessdds.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/N06/512/07/PDF/N0651207.pdf?OpenElement, it is rather most likely that GB / UK voted for this Resolution in order not to provoke its own Scottish Nation into an accelerated process of political Independence from UK. It is common knowledge that Scotland is engaged in a determined and systematic Self Determination process, a process which UK has not tried stop or to perish: compare and contrast this with the behavior and policies of UK in faraway but still technically British-colonized Africa, especially Biafra-Nigeria. As the British themselves would say, “What is good for the gander is [apparently NOT] good for the goose…” when it comes to the Scots of UK Versus the Biafrans in the Nigeria geopolitical space.

Tony Blair, the past leader of UK, is quoted to have once said that:

"The state of Africa is a scar on the conscience of the world."
"But if the world as a community focused on it, we could heal it."
"And if we don't, it will become deeper and angrier."
Source: BBC News Tuesday October 2001 15:28 GMT 16:28 UK
You are in UK Politics; “BLAIR: Key quotes”

Consider the hypocrisy? oxymoron? naivete? flippancy? Or, just sound-bites? You be the judge:

1) Does the world have a conscience when it comes to Africa? (Hint: China has just stepped into the same pernicious colonial jackboots introduced 300 years ago by Britain in Africa; UK is carrying out the same colonial policies in Africa—she never really stopped nor left).

2) Whose conscience, really, if there be such—the world’s or UK’s? (Hint: the original injury was caused by Britain. Today, Britain / UK is still the lead-State supporting colonial African puppet and unworkable governments, when such governments would have since died a natural death to allow for the indigenous Nations—Nations such as Biafra—to evolve into their own.)

3) “’World-as-a-community’ focus”? (Hint: the World “Powers” have partitioned the unfortunates [including entire hapless Africa] into “areas of influence”—actually, “possessions” wherein each Power does as it pleases with its own possession, without scrutiny or challenge. There is no world “community”—just fiefdoms. Who can forget US Nixon’s soliloquy [revealed in declassified US government documents] as Nixon literally wrung his hands in utter helplessness while Wilson of UK starved Biafran children, pregnant women, old men and old women, to the tune of mindboggling 2 million or so, in 1968-1970?)

4) “…Heal…Africa…”? (Hint: how can you heal Africa when you are busy causing and sustaining further injuries in Africa, as a matter of policy, while refusing to listen to the pleas of the suffering people?)

5) "And if we don't, it will become deeper and angrier." This one is self-commenting, seeing that Africa’s injuries have indeed “become deeper and angrier”—thanks to the author of these statements who also led his contemporary government in UK’s ongoing malicious policy in Africa.

Tony Blair’s metaphor of “scar” regarding Africa reveals genius.  By genetic predisposition, many Africans form “bad” scars: the scars are called “Keloids.”  I should know: I am African (Biafran, to be precise); and I am a Physician. Keloids, in a sense, may even be regarded as a form of Skin Cancer. They won’t kill you, but they are grotesque; if you cut one out, an even larger, uglier one regrows in its place—same for if you irritate it. Yet, many African cultures master this invasive skin scarring and deliberately inflict and exploit it while skillfully turning it into a beautiful, desirable, appealing live-skin art. Genius: Africa’s or Blair’s? Think about it.

In the modern times, Tony Blair represents that which is completely wrong with UK’s Africa policy, and nowhere is this more obvious than in the case of Biafra-Nigeria. Nowhere is the result as destructive and as catastrophic as in victimized Biafra.  Sadly, even Nigeria, used by the UK government as the ribbing-point of this malevolent policy against Biafra and Biafrans, is in ruins, as a result. As such, if we are talking about “conscience,” allow us to tickle the conscience, not of the world, but first, of Britain / UK.

The question which should be on everyone’s mind, as we return to Chukwuji’s and Ethelbert's apt and shared “Lamentations” is this:

“Just what of Biafra would threaten or jeopardize the British Government’s interest, or the interest of the people of UK?”

Why is the British government, with relish and apparent determination, directly and indirectly killing the Chukwuji’s and Ethelbert's of Africa—the Biafrans? Talk to the World, Chukwuji and Ethelbert. Talk to Great Britain. Where there is conscience, it can be tickled. If there is a conscience…

Oguchi Nkwocha, MD
A Biafran Citizen
California, USA

On behalf of the Nation and People of Biafra

RELATED PODCAST AND STORIES:
PODCAST with Oguchi Nkwocha, M. D.
STORY #1: NIGERIA: Did you know people are dying?
STORY #2: NIGERIA: GREED, HUMAN ABUSE, STEALING and loving your neighbor?
STORY #3: NIGERIAN LEADERS STOLE 100 BILLION SINCE 1999 

Tuesday, January 01, 2008 at 08:56 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Tags: Africa, Biafra, Nigeria, Tony Blair

The Christmas Spirit from the Heart of Biafra

WishingstarThe Christmas Spirit from the Heart of Biafra
...Music, Message and News Analysis
with Dr. Oguchi Nkwocha
Voice of Biafra International (VOBI)
Listen NOW

This is a special holiday gift --- an experience of Christmas through the hearts of the Biafran people. Listen in to this recorded broadcast and follow along below to this moving Christmas message reaching out to all of us across the world...

Christmas fast approaches and the Season already dwells among us. Let us Biafrans now allow ourselves to be caressed by it; let us allow ourselves to be covered by the gentleness, the grace and goodness of this Christmas Season. Let Christmas become us, and we, Christmas. Amen. And, that’s all of us: Biafrans and non-Biafrans alike, for Christmas knows no borders or boundaries. Amen.

Christmas a biala a bia: ka anyi ndi Biafra kwee ka mmuo Christmas wuru mmuo ga a no na ime anyi—anyi na ndi Uwa na ile: Amen!

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Christmas is about Peace .The World is full of strife and struggles; Biafra’s struggle against Evil called Nigeria is one such struggle of Good against Evil. This struggle is ferocious; it is relentless. But, Christmas is a reminder that Struggle, no matter how fierce, will never overcome Peace; Christmas is our assurance that Peace triumphs over Strife--always; Christmas is the proof that Peace is enduring, to the end. So may we Biafrans be reminded this Season: Biafra shall know Peace; Biafra shall be at peace again. Amen. And, so shall the World—our Tormentor included. Amen. 

Christmas wu Udo; Christmas na a si na Udo e merie la Ogu na Nsogbu na ime Uwa ya. Christmas na a si na, na ihe gbasara Ndoli anyi ndi Biafra na i nweta Biafra, na Udo e merie la Ndoli ahu, maka Udo Biafra a nochie la anya Ndoli na Nsogbu Nigeria. Amen. Na ihi Christmas: Udo Biafra; udo Uwa, Udo ebe o wula, ma owughiladi Nigeria. Amen.

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“Goodwill!” is the Spirit of Christmas. Biafra and Biafrans have been so bruised and victimized by Nigeria that we have forgotten the term, Goodwill, and its meaning. We do not even know if we ourselves possess such a normally natural disposition anymore; quite certain, though, that Goodwill is NOT to be in any way or manner associated with our Tormentor, Nigeria. But, Christmas restores the promise and practice of Goodwill: may such be the promise and the practice in Biafra, and by Biafrans. Amen. And, since Christmas Goodwill—the only kind there really is—knows no bounds, may our Tormentor be touched, possessed of and changed by this Goodwill, too. Amen.

“Obioma” wu Mmuo Christmas.  Maka nsogbu na mmegbu Nigeria mere ndi Biafra, o nwere ike wuru na anyi a maghi zi kwa ihe Obioma wu. Ma, Christmas e cheta ra la anyi Obioma, nye kwa anyi Obioma ahu, nke no na mmuo anyi. Obioma ahu wu oke zuru Uwa dum: ya ka anyi wu ndi Biafra ji; Obioma ahu ka anyi na e nye Uwa dum—ma Nigeria kwa. Amen!

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By the tradition of Christmas, Magic makes and becomes Reality; Wishes made come true.  Christmas is a guarantee that Humanity will Wish; more so, that Humanity will find some way to fulfill her own Wishes; and characteristically, that Humanity will deliberately make this Season magical with the “good” Magic, by her magical actions. Biafrans have one collective wish this Christmas: Liberation from Nigeria, that we may finally enjoy our Freedom and Liberty. Christmas is the reassurance that we will deliver on that Wish: we will fulfill that Wish. Amen. In our own Liberty and Freedom, Nigeria may also know her own Liberty and Freedom, as will the rest of the World. Amen. Thus Biafra will make Magic and know the Magic of Christmas; as will Nigeria; as will the rest of the World. Amen.

Christmas wu oge “Ihe Di Ebube”, mgbe anyi na e nweta ihe anyi choro—ihe no anyi na obi. Na oge Ihe Ebube ya, ihe anyi choro, Christmas e nye anyi ya. Otu ihe ka anyi wu ndi Biafra choro na oge ya: Ihe ahu wu Biafra: ka Nigeria si anyi na ahu puo, ka anyi si Nigeria puwa, gaa nweta Biafra anyi. Nweta Biafra ka e jiri gbara anyi Christmas: anyi ma na o mechala e mechaa. Na Nigeria i ha anyi wu Biafra aka, ka anyi nwere onwe anyi,  Nigeria na e nyere onwe nke ya aka ka o nwere onwe ya—nke e meeghi bee e me. O wu “Liberty and Freedom,” onyiye Christmas nyere Uwa dum. Amen.

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This Christmas, it is our Wish that our revered brethren-heroes, the members of MASSOB in Nigeria’s prisons, including their leader, our adored Ralph Uwazurike, and their officials, such as our beloved Uchenna Madu, have their complete and unconditional freedom. It is our Wish that the world over, all similarly unjustly imprisoned persons have their full and unconditional release. In the Spirit of Christmas. In the name of Christmas. This Christmas.

Na oge Christmas ya—na aha na Mmuo Christmas—anyi choro ka a hapu umu nne anyi ndi MASSOB na ile no na mkporo ndi Nigeria aka, ka ha puta na mkporo—ma onye isi MASSOB, Ralph Uwazurike, ma ndi ndu ndi MASSOB, dika Uchenna Madu.  Anyi ji kwa Obi Christmas na a cho ka ndi mmadu ndi owula ndi no na onodu di ka ndi MASSOB anyi no na mkporo Nigeria taa, na ebe owula na ime uwa ya, ka e weputa ha, hapu ha aka. Na ihi Christmas.

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Biafra alive! Because it is God Who makes it so!

Biafra: biri kwa

Biafra, ndu gi! Biafra, ndu gi!! Biafra, ndu gi!!!—na ndu anyi kwa. Maka Chineke nonyere la gi—nonyere kwa ra anyi!

That’s the News Analysis for the week. Thank you.

God bless and keep Biafra, and you, until our next broadcast.

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Voice of Biafra International (VOBI)
A SHORTWAVE Radio Broadcast Service
transmitting on 15.67 MHz (on 19 meter band)
at 2000 - 2100 Hours UTC (Universal Time [Coordinated])
equivalent to 9.00pm - 10.00pm Biafraland time every Friday
A project of Biafra Foundation (BF) and Biafra Actualization Forum (BAF)

http://www.biafraland.com http://www.biafraland.com/NewsAnalysis.htm http://www.biafraland.com/vobi.htm

Saturday, December 22, 2007 at 11:30 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Tags: Biafra, Current Affairs, MASSOB, Nigeria

Standing In Peace

MotherearthAs the most powerful leaders in the world work to discover pathways to peace, the Interfaith Encounter Association in Jerusalem continues to help us discover how people are leading the way. I was taken by one of events they shared in their newsletter that was organized by the Jerusalem Municipality. In its simplicity, it is the children demonstrating that a new world vision begins with each of us valuing our good neighbors.

They held an exhibition at Jerusalem's City Hall plaza. The exhibition was called Buddy Bears, featuring 138 "Buddy Bears" representing as many bears as countries acknowledged by the United Nations.

Ieabuddybears_3As was written in a plaque describing the exhibition, "They stand peacefully hand-in-hand promoting tolerance and understanding between different nations and cultures." It was described as an enjoyable "trip around the globe" with a chance to view these "designer" bears from around the world. (Click on the picture to see a bigger view.)

I continue to be grateful for IEA's work in connecting with people around the world to help us all see the good that can be done. The work by the Jerusalem Municipality is a wonderful example. Dr. Stolov shared the story of the Interfaith Encounter Association (IEA) mission with me:

"Some years back, I joined with a group of long-time activists in interfaith dialogue to form the Interfaith Encounter Association. Each of us felt a compelling need to make interfaith dialogue a widely used tool for building harmonious inter-communal relations in the Holy Land and the Middle East. Our vision was to make interfaith dialogue a real social movement---one that would transform these relations of mutual ignorance at best---and violence at worst---into mutual understanding, respect and trust.

We started with a framework of inclusion from the start. Our Board was composed of two Jews, two Muslims, two Christians and two Druze. These inclusive qualities attracted many people very quickly. We were moved by the response that included thoughts signing up for our mailing list and thousands of people participating in hundreds of dialogue programs.

...After being involved in these interactive dialogues focused on building mutual understanding, respect and trust, I believe real peace is possible and that it is
much easier to achieve than one would think."

It it notable that the Interfaith Encounter Association has been acknowledged for their groundbreaking efforts in generating peace and acknowledging the peace that people are generating for themselves with their time, ingenuity, and hearts, including these IEA honors:

Women's Peace Initiative Award - 2007
INTR°A-PROJECT AWARD for the Complementation of Religions - 2007
Prize for Humanity by the Immortal Chaplains Foundation in the U.S. - 2006


IEA's courageous work, and the work of people, like those involved from the Jerusalem Municipality, is a compelling call to leaders around the world and to all of us. Peace begins with each of us and we need to teach it to our children looking to us for leadership.

"It may be long before the law of love will be recognized in internal affairs. The machineries of governments stand between and hide the hearts of one people from those of another." --- Mahatma Gandhi

As we move into a new year may we all stand for peace wherever we find ourselves in the world. It is by living by the law of love that our world will be transformed.

Debbe

debbe kennedy
founder, president and CEO
Global Dialogue Center and
Leadership Solutions Companies
www.globaldialoguecenter.com

9781576754993lpodtwIEA is also featured in my new book...
www.puttingourdifferencestowork.com

Putting Our Differences to Work  Pre-Order at Amazon

The
Fastest Way to Innovation, Leadership and High Performance
by Debbe Kennedy
 ▪ Berrett-Koehler ▪ May 2008 – Hardcover
Foreword by Joel A. Barker, futurist, filmmaker and author
Paradigms: The Business of Discovering the Future

Sunday, December 16, 2007 at 08:47 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Tags: books, current affairs, middle east, world peace

THE POWER of A NEW WORLD VISION

Circlespiral2Recently, in response to our post, "NEW WORLD VISION": "When evil men burn and bomb, good men build and bind," Janina left a meaningful comment, I wanted to share her comment and my response back:

JANINA WROTE and QUESTIONED:
I am totally moved by all of these entries by yourself and Dr. Nkwocha. Sadly women, who represent a majority in the world, as well as the poor, are underestimated and not-allowed to make changes on a large scale. We are bullied and destroyed even in North America, especially in our homes and the work place. Rarely does the law help us. I ask how we can collectively or individually make changes when so much evil pervades the earth? Perhaps writing is one of the ways.

The threat of Christian destruction is becoming a world pendemic. Governments are slowly being run by corporations and corporations are after only one thing and that is money and profit.

How do we get through to our government officials? How do we reach out on a world scale, when we cannot even in our own back yard.

RESPONSE TO JANINA from DR. OGUCHI NKWOCHA:

Dear Janina:

I identified these issues in your efficient response—two dozen or so issues in just 3 short paragraphs!
________________________________________________________________
# Women:
• represent a majority in the world, but 
• represent a majority of the world’s poor,
• are underestimated
• are not allowed to make changes on a large scale.
• are bullied and
• are destroyed, even in North America,
• are destroyed  in our homes and
• are bullied the work place.
• Are rarely helped by the law.

#  Present Realities:
• Evil pervades Earth
• The threat of Christian destruction is becoming a world pandemic
• Governments are slowly being run by corporations
• Corporations are after only one thing and that is money and profit


# Questions:
• How we can collectively or individually make changes?
• How do we get through to our government officials?
• How do we reach out on a world scale?
• If we can’t even make changes in our backyard, how do we reach out on a world scale?


# One Solution:
• Writing is one of the ways.
______________________________________________________________________

Your writing re-translated above in fact supports the point that you make: “…[Perhaps] writing is one of the ways…”

My first impression is to throw this open to all readers, and I still favor this idea, because no one source or person has all the answers.

Elsewhere, I have pointed out the power of Vision / “en-Visioning.”  One Vision can produce the results that will solve myriads of problems, or eliminate a root-problem of protean manifestations. We cannot underestimate the power and efficiency, efficacy and enduring nature of Vision. Let’s use it. Individually and collectively.

Sometimes, the compelling nature of a Vision stimulates desired change-producing Political activism in parts of the world where such is productive; at other times, Social activism; in some places, “Communication Activism” (Media, including Writing), in other places, coordinated civil disobedience and Labor action. Activism can be done on an individual level and or a collective level; either way, it is a Vision that ignites it and supports it through to consummation. Yet, activism is but one vehicle for fulfillment of the goals of a Vision: “the system” is more creative.

The thing about Vision is that neither time nor space binds it: it drives the process or processes relentlessly, oblivious of time-frames, oblivious of “failures,” such that the goal is invariably accomplished: today; if not, then tomorrow—whenever—for sure; but accomplished it will be.

Do not allow “present realities” shrink the horizon of what is possible. That also includes not allowing current pervasive negatives affect your ability to form the correct Vision—or to engage in the act of “en-Visioning” at all.

There is practical value in using “Vision.” Really!
Margaret Mead said, quoted in several versions, something like: “…All it takes is a few committed persons to make a change in the world; and in fact, that’s about the only way such change in the world is possible...” History and facts back up her observation.
Can you believe that just one woman and her activism compelled the entire State of California to reconsider and adopt what I call “Green Consciousness”:  responsible use of fossil fuels and management of such resources and the fallout from their use? Her so-called trials and tribulations at the hands of all-powerful, all-wealthy and almighty stakeholders only led to other States in the US adopting her goals, and forcing a US Supreme Court ruling in favor of her goals, thereby now compelling the US government to acknowledge and support such?

Debbe Oneness once quoted: “…the greatest engineering feat of the Universe is the Human Mind…”  That Mind works with Vision.

Vision.

Thank you, Janina, for pricking our individual and collective psyche. We need that.

Oguchi Nkwocha

Oguchi Nkwocha, MD
A Biafran Citizen
California, USA

On behalf of the Nation and People of Biafra

RELATED VIDEO, PODCAST AND STORIES:
Joel Barker's POWER OF VISION video (bottom of Five Regions exhibit) PODCAST with Oguchi Nkwocha, M. D.
STORY #1: NIGERIA: Did you know people are dying?
STORY #2: NIGERIA: GREED, HUMAN ABUSE, STEALING and loving your neighbor?
STORY #3: NIGERIAN LEADERS STOLE 100 BILLION SINCE 1999 

Saturday, September 22, 2007 at 06:09 PM | Permalink | Comments (7) | TrackBack (0)

Tags: activism, California, green consciouness, women, women in the workplace, world vision

Start Building a New World in Your Mind

PeacesymbolI am fond of old books that came before me. I can't tell you why, but they have intrigued me since I was very young. It is not about looking at the past. It is more about having an interest in hearing what others have to say --- and I've learned there is much wisdom that is passed down to us to take in and apply to our lives and world today.

Once in a while through my research on other things, another old book comes to me. I particularly like ones that seem to be in conversation with me. Recently, I found one entitled, TAKE A SECOND LOOK AT YOURSELF written in 1950 by John Homer Miller. There is a great chapter in it called "Start Building the New World in Your Mind." Here are some excerpts to share.

"You want a better world. What you need to help make the world better is not more education of your intellect, but something spiritual and ethical added to your knowledge. You need educated emotions and a dedicated heart. Shakespeare once said that he can always tell a wise many by the fact that everything he says and does smacks of something greater than himself.

...only the consciousness of a purpose mightier than any man and worthy of all men can compose and fortify and control the soul of man. Knowledge is not enough. Knowledge is knowing about things which you can control, which you can master. Wisdom is knowing about and putting yourself under the influence of things which can master you.

Before you do what you can do for the world, do the more difficult thing---let something be done for you. Before you have any right to face the world, you must face yourself. Before you can really say anything worth while to others, you must first let something be said to you. Before can help make the world right, you must be made right within.

Great souls start from within and move out; they start at the center of civilization and move out toward the circumference.

Unless within my heart I hold
Abiding Peace,
No league of nations can succeed,
Nor will strife cease.

If I myself see every fault
In kin and friend,
The world may never see the day
When war will end."

How are you starting from within to build a new world in your mind?
May it lead to you being a beacon of PEACE. Imagine its power when connected to others with the same vision. Hold that thought!

Debbe

debbe kennedy
founder, president and CEO
author, virtual speaker and dialogue leader
Global Dialogue Center and
Leadership Solutions Companies
www.globaldialoguecenter.com

new book!
Putting Our Differences to Work
The
Fastest Way to Innovation, Leadership and High Performance
by Debbe Kennedy
▪ Berrett-Koehler ▪ Spring 2008 –
Hardcover
Foreword by Joel A. Barker, futurist, filmmaker and author
Paradigms: The Business of Discovering the Future

Sunday, September 09, 2007 at 08:19 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Tags: books, civilization, knowledge, mind, peace, Shakespeare, vision, war and peace, wisdom, world peace

NIGERIA: Lessons learned from a Shameful Journey

HeartWhat has happened to our consciousness as people? We must be asking ourselves these kinds of questions in order to shape a future that is good for all and harms no one. One glaring example of the misery our self-interest perpetuates is demonstrated in Dr. Oguchi Nkwocha's poignant explanation of lessons learned from the shameful journey of Andrew Young, the former black civil rights leader and confidant of Martin Luther King Jr., with a pretigious history, who has recently come under criticism for his dirty dealings with corrupt African governments, especially for his close relationship with General Olusegan Obasanjo, Nigeria’s former president. How easily our actions and behaviors can tumble a life with much good into a shameful journey.

PERSPECTIVE by Dr. Oguchi Nkwocha

Those who use the excuse that they want to change Nigeria from inside out, take special note! Below is the usual path and endpoint.

BTW: When we started harping on Andrew Young, no one else took note. Good to know that our instincts and deductions always pan out. Now, read and weep!

Oguchi Nkwocha, MD
A Biafra Citizen
Nwa Biafra

_________________________________________________________________________

Andrew Young: Tracing a Shameful Journey

Step 1:

“…Young put it another way, “For 40 years of my life,” he told the Times, “I was on the outside seeking change. I realized that I could be more effective being on the inside implementing it.”…” –excerpted from article below.

Step 2:

“…Reports indicate that Young’s ties to Africa developed while he was the US ambassador to the UN in the late 70s, meeting Obasanjo, the military-installed president of Nigeria, at the time. “Obasanjo and I kind of hit it off immediately,” Young told the Times. “We were mainly interested in democracy.”

Actually, Obasanjo was a US operative, closely allied to the CIA, who took power in 1976 after his predecessor, Murtala Muhammad, was assassinated under unexplained circumstances. At the time, the US was still reeling from the OPEC oil embargo and was vitally concerned with Nigerian oil interests.

When Obasanjo left power the first time, in 1979, he was appointed to the board of directors of the CIA-run African American Institute, headed by the former US ambassador to Nigeria Donald B. Easum. In the 1980s, Obasanjo was sent on high-profile speaking tours by the Center for Strategic and International Studies and the US Institute for Peace. …”

Step 3:

“…Young has defended his relations with Obasanjo, portraying him as the defender of democracy in Nigeria who has broken the past practice of corruption that has been rampant since the country won its independence. Obasanjo has also received the praises of President George W. Bush and Colin Powell as an example of the type of democracy they would like to see in Africa…”

Step 4:

“Who benefits from Andy Young’s relationship with the government of Nigeria? It’s not the Nigerian people,” remarked Ken Silverstein, a reporter for Harper’s Magazine. “As I see it, the primary beneficiaries of his work in Nigeria and elsewhere in Africa are those corrupt, authoritarian regimes he works with and his private corporate clients.”

Young has provided his services both to enrich his clients and himself, but also to assist the United States as it joins hands with various blood-soaked dictatorships and strongman in order to secure American strategic interests in the pivotal continent…”

Step 5:

“…Young is a member of the National Security Study Group and therefore would have been briefed on the Bush administration’s newly established United States Africa Command (AFRICOM)

Young is aware that the US has developed strategic interests in the oil states of Africa and has made plans for the establishment of strategic military bases. West Africa alone has an estimated 15 percent of the world’s oil reserves. And by 2015, the region is expected to provide 25 percent of the US energy market…”

Concluding step:

“…Meanwhile, the funds flowing into GWI and the hands of Andrew Young are at the expense of the Nigerian and African masses. Despite the nation’s wealth in natural resources, 70 percent of its population of 140 million lives on less than US $1 per day….”

Learn more: www.biafraland.com

~ end.

I believe that Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. would weep at this news. He would be saddened to see the extent to which we, as human beings, are willing to go to satisfy and justisfy and excuse our greed and self-interest in a disturbing disguise. Who knows how many details we may be missing in this story of Andrew Young that might tell a fuller story in any direction. It doesn't really matter. This shameful journey serves as an example to us all of our human weakness. It points out that every words we speak, every thought we express, every attitude we reveal to the world demonstrates how big or small we are as leaders in our own right. As most of those actions and behaviors have implications on others we too often overlook. Even if Andrew Young were to object, it begs him to ask the question of himself, how did my actions and behavior leave such an impression? How did they turn good into shame and sham?

In the words of Dr. King ...

"All humanity is involved in a simple process, and all men are brothers. To the degree that I harm my brother,  no matter what he is doing to me, to that extent I am harming myself. ...It is hardly a moral act to encourage others patiently to accept injustice which he himself doe not endure.

...We are caught in an insescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly affects all indirectly."

So just what size is your leadership?

How can we continue to turn our heads when such greed and injustice sits at our feet awaiting our action?

I leave you asking myself this questions of conscience. I hope you will too.

Debbe

Debbe Kennedy
Founder, Global Dialogue Center

On behalf of the Nation and People of Biafra

RELATED PODCAST AND STORIES:
PODCAST with Oguchi Nkwocha, M. D.
STORY #1: NIGERIA: Did you know people are dying?
STORY #2: NIGERIA: GREED, HUMAN ABUSE, STEALING and loving your neighbor?
STORY #3: NIGERIAN LEADERS STOLE 100 BILLION SINCE 1999

Saturday, August 11, 2007 at 10:36 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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