StopGlobalWarming.org

Monday, April 23, 2007

Akhirnya gue ke Bali juga! Part I




Berbicara tentang Bali..sapa coba nyang kagak pengen kesono?.Jutaan turis asing dan domestik telah menghabiskan waktu libur mereka setiap tahunnya dipulau Dewata ini.


Hari itu gue, seno, inay and fadil terbang dengan Air Asia. Terbang dari cengkareng pukul 19.50 WIB tiba di denpasar pukul 22.35 WITA. Akhirnya gue ke Bali juga...

Cuaca malam itu sangat cerah. Dari atas langit Jakarta gue bisa melihat dengan sangat jelas lampu-lampu mobil antrian panjang kemacetan di berbagai sudut kota. saat itu gue memang sengaja duduk di window untuk bisa menikmati perjalanan yang secara sadar memang gue nantikan..sejak dulu kalaaaa...

Tiba larut malam membuat perut kami yang telah diisi dengan pempek palembang di Jakarta tadi sudah lapar kembali. Syukurlah..orang tua angkat kita Pak Haji Eko (Kadang2 kita memanggil beliau dengan pak Jecko) yang baik hati tersebut langsung membawa kita ke sebuah restoran istimewa untuk makan bubur dan aneka seafood yang konon katanya adalah langganannya Mas Tommy Soeharto ketika di penjara.(Kok iso yo?). Ramada Bintang Hotel menjadi tempat peristirahatan pertama kami. Kami harus segera tidur, krn paginya misi sudah menunggu.


Huaaaaahh...selamat pagi Kuta, Bali!!. Mixed Breakfast menjadi pilihan gue pagi itu..krn semuanya terlihat menarik untuk dicicipi. Dari srambble, union bread, sausage, cornflakes, till nasi goreng gw coba. Diantara para turis2 asing dari berbagai belahan dunia kita cepat-cepat menghabiskan waktu breakfast yang tersisa...krn kita semua telat dan bangun kesiangan.


Siang itu kami ditemani oleh Pak Bambang dan Pak Eko menuju komplek Garuda Wisnu Kencana (GWK) yang berada diatas lahan seratus hektar di kawasan Bukit Jimbaran itu yang dibangun untuk menandai kebangkitan Indonesia sekaligus sumbangan bangsa ini pada peradaban dunia setelah Candi Borobudur. Saat ini proyek tersebut baru selesai 20%, jika proyek ini rampung, patung Wisnu yang mengendarai burung Garuda ini disebut sebagai lebih tinggi dari patung Liberty kebanggaan Amerika. Tinggi patungnya 146 meter dengan landasannya setinggi 25 meter.

Happy Earth Day, Today Problems Come From Yesterday Solutions




It was shock me when my friend Inayah told me that she saw a documentary film about Climate Change and Global Warming on Metro TV that conclude "Every natural disaster are made by people".


On the weekend of April 15-16, 2007 I joined a workshop called Learning Organization in Jakarta which organized by Initiatives of Change Indonesia and facilitated by sincere lady Ms. Sheila Damodaran from Singapore. This workshop attracted 20 persons from many backgrounds, from students to Human Resource Consultant.

In that inspiring class, we talked on Disaster in Indonesia, then we split to two themes on Natural Disaster and Man Made Disaster. Some example on natural disaster that we had are flood, earthquake, landslide, and tsunami. Beside, on man made disaster we had plane crash, and ship sink. After that, in a group with 3-4 persons we write down some of the factors or reasons from the social, technology, economic, political (STEP) factors where the disasters are coming from, based on perspective from the government side, private sectors side and people side. After all, we stick all the flip chart in the wall and try to connect one another with causality line.
It was AMAZING when we found that every cause are interrelated one another. "Today problem come from yesterday solution" is worked here. So, from that simple pictures that we had drawn together, come up a conclusion that what we called before as A Natural Disaster is A Man Made Disaster.

In this two days workshop on level one from three level of Learning Organization we had already learn on System Thinking (understanding complexity) and Mental Model. Cannot waiting for the next workshop on May 2007.
.

Simple Persons with a Big Heart

International Youth Forum 2008


International Youth Forum

Building a Peaceful World:

Learning a New Global Relationship with Moslem Communities

Initiatives of Change – Indonesia

Bandung, Indonesia, January 2008

Background

After the Cold War era, post 9/11 tragedy, Afghanistan and Iraq war; there has been a growing challenge in the world on the relation with Moslem communities and Islam as a whole. The clash of civilisations syndrome and a situation of Islam phobia are posing even physical security threats to Moslem. Unfortunately many were not ready to learn about this, added with misinformation and bad publication, resulting Islam as the world’s new challenge. This has gone from bad to worse when many too assumed that Islam is the terrorist. These prejudices were escalated by many violent terrorist acts that based their actions on the name of Islam. As a result, there’s a kind of negative stereotype on Moslem communities all over the world.

The challenges itself are not on how non Moslem community sees Moslem, it also happened the other way around. Many Moslems find difficulties in adjusting themselves in a secular world where they have to share their values to live in a non Islam culture. This is where conflict starts. Non Moslem has to learn and respect Islam and its values, and Moslem has to cope with non Islam environment that sometimes conflict their own values. The main problem is the lack of information on what Islam is really about and lack of communication between Moslem and non-Moslem.

As the ones who lived in both side of the communities, youth today often find difficulties in facing this problem. However we believe that youth can be the answer for the gap as they can communicate to both communities. As the agent of change, we need to empower youth to be able to bridge these conflicting values. The question then is how can we empower them with tools that strengthen their own values and at the same time able to accept different ones?

Indonesia as one of the countries with the biggest Moslem people has been dealing with the problem of pluralism ever since it’s independence in 1945. Having 637 different ethnic groups scattered in more than 13,000 islands, with 6 recognized religions and local beliefs, have made Indonesia one of the countries that basically live with pluralism. Although youth in Indonesia have to face the same challenges on conflicting values, they seem to be able to practically live with differences and show the other face of a peaceful Islam. This then raises the second question, what is the different value on pluralism of Indonesian youth and how can it be shared to other fellow youth across the globe? How can Moslem youth and other faith traditions play a more active role in initiating and sustaining inter-religious efforts? What obstacles in the current framework for inter-religious dialogue and cooperation efforts need to be overcome to ensure stronger networks for peace? The event of this youth forum will be based on these questions. We hope to see and offer some learning through insightful and true conversations and sharing among participants to collaborate and see how new spirit and youth power emerges from the forum.

For a common future all stakeholders ought to work for reform to sustainable peace from the perspective of ecology and humanity. International Youth Forum (IYF) 2008 will offer unique opportunities for thoughts and evolving a future oriented action plans. At the end, we will suggest the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) as our common ground in taking those action plans. During the forum, the participant will meet and share their experience through various exciting sharing methods about the issue.

This program is initiated by a group of exciting young people who are engaged and involved in Initiatives of Change – Indonesia (IofC Indonesia) and shall be held in Bandung, West Java, Indonesia. Initiatives of Change - Indonesia since its inception in 2002 has been in building capacity of youth and promoting exchange, cooperation and solidarity. Initiatives of Change - Indonesia has organized national and international training workshop in Indonesia.

General Objective

This Forum has the goal to promote mutual understanding, friendship and cooperation among youth leaders in the Moslem and other world faiths communities through real conversations on what things that matter the most, so that they can be the agents of a peaceful change in their own communities.

Expected Program Output

§ To publish a guide book for youth who are living in countries that have challenges with Moslem communities, based on experiences and stories that are told during the event.

§ To learn and find new ways and at the same time sharing fellow youth about peaceful Islam, especially from Indonesian context.

§ To build youth’s awareness and sensitivity on interfaith dialogue.

§ Sharing experiences of peaceful living together in the past

§ Create and join the available network of independent Interfaith Youth intellectuals/leaders of civil society.

Expected Long Term Outcomes/Change

§ Increased understanding and appreciation of Islam and other faith traditions

§ Friendship between and among youth leaders.

§ Reducing the stereotyping of each other especially in a conflict situation

§ An ongoing process of dialogue between leaders of Moslem and other faith communities in the region/international that can be both preventive and proactive in reducing and eliminating tensions.

Theme

The grand theme of the forum: “The True Side of Peaceful Islam” with the sub theme “Learning a new Global Relationship with Moslem Communities from Indonesian Perspective.”

And the grand theme will be divided into 4 plenary sessions:

1. The Images of Islam at the Present Time
2. The Real Essence of Islam for Peace
3. Youth Empowerment in the New Millennium
4. Searching for a Common Ground: Strengthening Youth Participation on Millennium Development Goal’s

Follow Up and Evaluation

A number of strategic planning’s are being employed to ensure that youth's commitments are sustained in the longer term and resulted in practical actions. There will be a daily evaluation, to monitoring the progress of the camp. The Both of Individuals and NGOs will have an opportunity also to make pledges for action at the end of the camp. The project officer committee will follow up with individuals via personal, phone or email communications to ensure and encourage these pledges are acted upon.

Program Format

This program will offer talk show plenary sessions, quiet time, the world café, appreciative inquiry, field trips, social work with local Moslem community, open space technology, personal reflection time, cultural night, family group, and cultural night.

Expected Participants

The IYF 2008 aims to reach out 300 young people ages of 18-30 from around the world that has been actively engaged or interested in this program. The target group takes into account nationality, ethnicity, gender, religious affiliation and geography. It attempts to achieve a balanced composition.

From Personal to the Global

It is my first posting, accompany by one of the next 10 top Indonesians bloggers Wazeen, I try to share something useful from my simple personal life, simple things, simple thoughts to the global dwellers.