Global Family Day
Global Family Day, (One Day of
Peace and Sharing) is celebrated every January 1st around the world as a
global day of peace and sharing. It is a
day where individuals and families share food with friends (especially the
needy), make personal pledges of nonviolence, and spread a message of peace and
sharing by ringing bells or beating a drum in hopes of making society and the
world a safer place to live. Global Family Day grew out of the United Nations Millennium
celebration, "One Day in Peace."
Originally
supported in the United States by Linda Grover, the original idea itself is
difficult to pin down because many grassroots
efforts around the world had independently sprung up to target this date as a
day for peace and had worked separately to prevail on local governments and the
U.N. to establish such a day. These efforts included a 1996 children's book
"One Day in Peace, January 1, 2000" by Steve Diamond and Robert Alan
Silverstein, which was translated into 22 languages. As a result, nearly 140
nations were poised to respond to the November 1997 declaration of the U.N. General Assembly that
the first year of the new millennium should launch an "International
Decade for the Culture of Peace & Nonviolence for the Children of the
World" which would be ushered in by "One Day of Peace." Finally,
in November 1999, the U.N. issued a formal invitation for world participation.
As the independent grassroots organizations around the world joined the effort,
one notable outcome was a special ceremony initiated by Gerry Either between Israeli and Palestinian families, at a refugee
camp in Nablus.
Later
that year, the United States Congress
followed the U.N. initiative and unanimously In 2001, the United
Nations General Assembly established this Observance as a
recurring annual event, also recommending that all Member states recognize the
new holiday. To date, more than 20 heads of state and many ambassadors have
endorsed what has now become known as Global Family Day.
The
organization's mission is to unite, inform, motivate, and connect people,
institutions, and governments of the world through the celebration of this day
of peace and sharing every January 1 and related year-around programs.
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