
Mosques invite visitors to mark UN Peace Day on 21 September – find out more here

Mosques invite visitors to mark UN Peace Day on 21 September – find out more here
If you are in London tomorrow afternoon, please join us at Westminster Central Hall, Westminster, SW1 9NH, at 4pm for an unusual event.
The Russian and Brazilian ambassadors will be speaking (the next countries to host the Olympic Games) and the Kuwaiti ambassador, HE Mr Khaled Al-Dawaisan GCVO, Dean of the Court of St James, will present letters from the diplomatic community in support of the Olympic Truce.
The London Peace Network will be speaking. We will be inviting the diplomatic community and others to take part in our 21st September initiative.
Join us if you can!
The Olympic Truce flag has been flying in the heart of London, between the Houses of Parliament and Westminster Abbey.
A surge of goodwill during London 2012 and the forging of a renewed British identity has been recognised: more relaxed, at ease with its pluralism and “where people were full of ideas and worked for the common good” (Sarah Crompton, Daily Telegraph).
British gold medalists have come from a wide range of backgrounds. After stunning performances from Mo Farah, Jess Ennis and Greg Rutherford last weekend, the Twitter joke ran, “A Muslim, a mixed race lass & a ginger bloke walk into a bar. Everyone gets them a drink.” Sneering and bullying suddenly dropped right out of fashion.
The prominence of female athletes has been noted. Commentators have been surprised to recognise, in non-Olympic times, women’s relative absence from public life as hard-working and successful members of society.
Jonathan Freedland wrote in the Guardian,
We got a glimpse of another kind of Britain.
A place which succeeds brilliantly, not least by drawing equally on all its talents, black and white, male and female.
A place where money and profit are not the only values, exemplified by the 70,000 volunteers who made the Games work and showed the world a smiling face while they were at it.
A place that reveres not achievement-free celebrity, but astonishing skill, granite determination and good grace.
Religious and community groups have been working together before and during the Games – offering hospitality, training on non-violent responses to conflict, inter faith walks, breaking the Ramadan fast with visitors, creating City Safe Havens, ringing bells for the Olympic Truce, arts festivals, fighting hate crime, questioning the narratives surrounding armed conflict, twinned projects exploring minorities and majorities in Pakistan and in the UK – and more. Much of this has been seen on the pages of the London Peace Network blog.
The 70,000 volunteer Gamesmakers have won plaudits from the President of the International Olympic Committee who praised “the kindness of the volunteers“. The Telegraph writes, “For the duration of the Olympics, London has put a smile on its face.”
For many local communities – which are often at the sharp end of violence both here in the UK and overseas – generosity of spirit, fair play, understanding and negotiating difference, living peacefully together and a smile are all highly valued. This is what the members of the London Peace Network are engaged in, day in, day out, and what they will be promoting as part of the Olympic Truce all summer. Watch this space for news of a significant burst of activities on 21 September.
Lord Michael Bates is with local communities from Syria who are now refugees in Lebanon.
He has posted an urgent appeal on YouTube from central Bekaa on the Lebanon/Syrian border.
He calls for a 24 hour ceasefire under the Olympic Truce on 12th August, 2012 to coincide with the Closing Ceremony of the XXX Olympiad in London.
This would allow humanitarian aid in and injured women and children out of Syria to safe havens in neighbouring countries.
It would also allow a pause in the fighting and an opportunity for political processes to begin to take shape – a glimmer of hope for an end to the violence.
People of all faiths and of none are welcome to join members of the Hyderi Islamic Centre, London SW16, on Saturday 18 August at 7.15pm to break the fast of Ramadan and to hear from
Rabbi Janet Darley, South London Liberal Synagogue
Brian Pearce, Inter Faith Network for the UK
Sheikh Ali Al Najjar, Detroit, USA
The Hyderi Islamic Centre invites visitors to an open iftar event each year and you will be assured of a warm welcome. All the details are on the flyer above.
Streatham (in Lambeth, south London) has its very own peace festival!
Running 17 – 23 September, look out for inspiration, celebration, contemplation and cultivation . . .
More information on events and how to get involved at www.littlebigpeace.com
Dr Filis is the Director of the International Olympic Truce Centre in Athens. Here he is interviewed on British Forces radio, including his thoughts on Syria.
Iftar 2012 is hosting the Egyptian Olympic team for Iftar on Saturday 11th August at Harrow Central Mosque.
Meet some medallists, but let them know you are coming so they can prepare the food!

Young Syrian refugees in Bekka Valley make the Olympic rings and call for a 24hr truce on “Peace Sunday” 12th August.
Lord Bates, who walked the length of Europe to promote the Olympic Truce, and who has blogged recently on who is responsible for keeping the Truce, is currently on the Lebanon-Syria border.
He writes on the 12,000-strong Olympic Truce Facebook page this evening
Call for 24 hour truce in Syria during the Closing Ceremony of the Olympics on Sunday 12th August made by Syrian refugees I met in Bekka Valley today but too frightened to show their faces.
It’s time for UN, IOC and LOCOG to hear their call and act….
Local communities are often the ones at the sharp end of conflict. Join the Olympic Truce Facebook page here.
The World in London – beautiful photos, voice clips and short interviews with Londoners from 204 countries.
You can view the exhibition at
until 30 August 2012.
This is our country – Olympian Mo Farah has inspired Hope not Hate to invite everyone to celebrate the moment when the UK as a nation found peace within itself.
Moments after Mo Farah’s fantastic 10,000m win at the Olympics, Mo was asked by a journalist if he’d have preferred to run as a Somali. He replied: “Look mate, this is my country.
“This is where I grew up, this is where I started life. This is my country and when I put on my Great Britain vest I’m proud. I’m very proud.”
And Mo is right. It is as much his country as it is mine or yours.
This last week has been amazing. From Danny Boyle’s wonderful Opening Ceremony to the medal haul we are now raking in. This is a moment that we as a nation found a peace with itself. There are many problems facing us but we are a modern, diverse and confident country.
Let’s join Mo in saying proudly that “this is my country”
Over 3,000 people have already signed the This Is Our Country wall, which you can do here.
The Olympic Truce wall in the Athlete’s Village has run out of space! But there is a virtual wall on the International Olympic Truce Centre’s website which is collecting contributions and uploads from around the world (last day will be 9 September, when the Paralympic Games end).
This is Not a Plate is travelling around the world and offers a beautiful and unique exhibition of ceramic art and poetry for universal responsibility.
The installation promotes the preservation of linguistic, cultural and intangible heritage of all communities and social responsibility education for unity, health, progress and peace.
The nave of St Ethelburga’s Centre for Reconciliation and Peace has been transformed ito a magical space in which 35 unique ceramic plates by ceramic artists from Nove, Italy are installed.
Each is inscribed with words we have in common that unite people around the world through their simultaneous presentation in 35 languages.
Entrance is free from 8 – 20 August from 10am to 10pm.
St Ethelburga’s Centre for Reconciliation and Peace, 78 Bishopsgate, London, EC2N 4AG. More information from 07989 545 958 or tent@stethelburgas.org.
More information about this unusual, beautiful and challenging exhbition here.
The London Peace Network has been working on something very special coming up this autumn. View and download the flyer here.
This year the International Day of Peace, which is marked each year on 21 September, falls on a Friday.
Islamic centres across the UK and overseas will be leading their local communities in marking the day.
They will invite visitors to join them during or after Friday Prayers to exchange messages of peace, to celebrate local peace-building activities and to enjoy the hospitality offered.
Local schools, churches, synagogues, temples, gurdwaras and community organisations will be invited to observe the day by accepting these invitations.
Some Islamic Centres in the UK are pairing up with a nearby church, religious community or school and linking their observance of the International Day of Peace to similar pairs overseas.
The following Muslim centres and organisations will be marking the International Day of Peace this year.
Al-Khoei Islamic Centre
East London Mosque
The London Central Mosque and the Islamic Cultural Centre
Mosques and Imams National Advisory Board
Muslim Council of Britain
Majlis-e-Ulama Europe
We invite you to join them and to participate by inviting visitors, or by accepting invitations, to mark the occasion at your local mosque or Islamic centre.
To find out more, or to register your Mosque or Islamic Centre on the online Directory, please contact the London Peace Network.
Further information: each year the International Day of Peace is observed around the world on 21 September. The United Nations General Assembly has declared this as a day devoted to strengthening the ideals of peace, both within and among all nations and peoples.