01 October 2005
COMMENTARIES
As he searched for an answer, he sensed that the moment for reconciliation would come and he wrote, ‘Caux is the place’.
REFLECTIONS
We are called not so much to give up what means most to us, but to make it sacred, to transform it.
LEAD STORY
Rajmohan Gandhi warns against the poisonous wind which targets people for being born Muslim, American or Jew.
PROFILE
Bill Porter founded a global think-tank out of his concern about the media’s influence. Michael Smith tells his story.
GUEST COLUMN
How do we react when we are treated unjustly, when we are pinned down, when we are shown, sometimes by force, that our will does not matter because someone else’s might is stronger?
A DIFFERENT BEAT
Mayor Shinzo Hamai chose something quite remarkable for the inscription on the memorial to the first atom bomb: ‘Rest in peace. For we shall not make the same mistake again.’
FEATURES
Mary Lean and Andrea Cabrera meet an artist whose work has given a voice to Holocaust survivors, and their descendants.
FEATURES
Paul Williams discovers that security is not just a military issue.
FEATURES
School leaver Eorann Lean gets a buzz out of a conference for young and old
FEATURES
When Matthew Waletofea decided to work for peace in his country, he knew he was putting his life at risk. He talks to Caz Hore-Ruthven.
FEATURES
Pamela Jenner takes part in a conference organized by young Eastern Europeans
FEATURES
I notice him spreading a mat on the floor to commence his morning prayers according to his religion, Islam. From this moment on, I know that this summer in Caux will bring a new experience.
FEATURES
What does it mean to be European today? Mary Lean reports from Caux.
NEWSDESK
In spite of the fact that the UN Charter on the Rights of the Child is the most widely ratified law in the world, violence against children continues.
EAR TO THE GROUND
From Ann Rignall behind the scenes in Caux, Switzerland