Children Performing Violins in Perfect Harmony of Peace

Photo Credit: UN Photo/Mark Garten

Music is the chord that binds citizens together to establish cultural bonds and set the global stage as a foundation for peace. This week was a special ceremony in the Japanese Garden at the United Nations Headquarters in New York City to commemorate the return of the Peace Bell to its original location there with young girls performing a special violin composition.

The role of popular culture has evolved at the United Nations with music, film, dance, art, literature, and song embracing and enhancing educational aspirations and ideals of the global citizen. (See: “New Cold War on the UN Stage & Closing Curtain on ‘We the People’.”)

The UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon says that the Peace Bell as one of the oldest outdoor gifts is symbolic of “collective desire for the world to live in peace.” I always take great inspiration whenever I pass by, and of course when we ring it each September to mark the International Day of Peace.”

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UN News Centre

Unlike many other gifts, the Peace Bell came to the United Nations courtesy of a non-governmental organization, the UN Association of Japan, even before Japan became a UN Member State. It was a sign of support of the goals and ideals of the Organization. The idea for a “bell of peace,” as it was originally known, was proposed by Mr. Chiyoji Nakagawa, a representative of the UN Association of Japan who attended the General Assembly’s sixth session, in 1951. “After surviving the cruelties and deprivations of the Second World War, Mr. Nakagawa wanted to create a symbol for humanity’s hopes for global peace,” Mr. Ban said.

For five years, as the United Nations renovated its Headquarters complex along Manhattan’s East River, the Peace Bell found a temporary home in the Rose Garden. It is currently placed at the intersection of the General Assembly, Secretariat, and Conference buildings. “Over the last five years that the Peace Bell was away, too many innocent people around the world have heard only the sounds of guns and bombs,” Mr. Ban said. “Now that it is restored back to its home, let us also intensify our work to restore the bells of peace in villages and cities and countries around the world,” he added.

Also speaking at today’s ceremony was President of the General Assembly Sam Kutesa who called the Peace Bell both unique and emblematic, having been cast using coins collected by the United Nations Association of Japan from children of all existing UN Member States in 1952. “Today, as we return this prominent icon of peace to its permanent location, let us recall the Declaration on the Rights of Peoples to Peace, adopted thirty years ago by the General Assembly,” Mr. Kutesa said.

The Declaration reaffirmed that the aspiration for peace is universal among all peoples and that every human being has the right to live in a peaceful environment. “Each time we ring this bell in the future, we should recall our commitment towards the peaceful resolution of conflicts and the building of lasting peace,” he added.

 

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