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Humainologie creative dialogue tomorrow Wednesday February 9 Ten Steps for Common Survival

  • Arthur Clark
  • Feb 8, 2022
  • 2 min read

Our event tomorrow night, Wednesday February 9, is entitled "Nowhere to Hide: 10 Steps for Common Survival." It starts at 7:00 PM Calgary time. I would emphasize both the golden opportunity and the tremendous importance of the event. There are existential threats on the road ahead, and we cannot afford to just keep following the old pattern of fighting among ourselves as in the most recent case of the US, Ukraine, and Russia. All of us need to think relentlessly about how we can change the direction of history. Here is the information about the event tomorrow:

https://mailchi.mp/bd9fd4332996/upcoming-event-on-wednesday-february-9-at-700pm?e=6b51f496e7 Please prepare your good questions for the Q&A. The link provided by Shinobu is here:

Meeting Time: Feb 9, 2022 7:00pm (MDT) Follow this link to join the event: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/89378501609?pwd=UDVqdXdxWmJiMVRPVFVRSUZMRHpDQT09 Meeting ID: 893 7850 1609 Passcode: 711697

Below this message I have appended somewhat more detailed information about Doug Roche, whose life and work have been monumental.

Arthur

Hon. Douglas Roche, O.C., is an author, parliamentarian and diplomat, who has specialized throughout his 45-year public career in peace and human security issues. Mr. Roche was a Senator, Member of Parliament, Canadian Ambassador for Disarmament, and Visiting Professor at the University of Alberta. He was elected Chairman of the United Nations Disarmament Committee at the 43rd General Assembly in 1988. In 2018, the International Peace Bureau awarded him the prestigious Sean MacBride Prize for his “indefatigable work, in particular as President of the UN Association and, as Ambassador for Disarmament during the height of the Cold War, helped maintain strong Canadian public support for the ideals of multilateralism in one of the most turbulent times in modern history.”

Mr. Roche was the founding Chairman of the Middle Powers Initiative, an international network of eight non-governmental organizations working for the elimination of nuclear weapons. In 2010, the City of Hiroshima named him an Honourary Citizen for his nuclear disarmament work and particularly for founding the Middle Powers Initiative. He was awarded the Calgary Peace Prize in 2017.

The author of 24 books, his latest is Recovery: Peace Prospects in the Biden Era. Mr. Roche holds nine honourary doctorates from Canadian and American universities and has received numerous awards for his work for peace and non-violence, including the Mahatma Gandhi Foundation for World Peace Award (Canada) and the United Nations Association’s Medal of Honour. In 1995, Pope John Paul II presented him with the Papal Medal for his service as Special Adviser on disarmament and security matters, and in 1998 the Holy See named him a Knight Commander of the Order of St. Gregory the Great.

In 2009, he received the Distinguished Service Award of the Canadian Association of Former Parliamentarians for his “promotion of human welfare, human rights and parliamentary democracy in Canada and abroad.” He is an Officer of the Order of Canada. In 2011, the International Peace Bureau nominated him for the Nobel Peace Prize.

 
 
 

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