Africa > Southern Africa > South Africa > The Prem Rawat Foundation’s Peace Education Program is having a profound impact on youth in South Africa.

South Africa: The Prem Rawat Foundation’s Peace Education Program is having a profound impact on youth in South Africa.

2015/12/11

Amid a world discourse often dominated by discussions of violence and politics, The Prem Rawat Foundation’s Peace Education Program is having a profound impact on youth in South Africa.

Prem Rawat recently spoke to students enrolled in the Peace Education Program (PEP) at TSiBA, an acclaimed nonprofit business school in Capetown, South Africa that specializes in giving disadvantaged youth opportunities to become entrepreneurial leaders.

Hundreds of students at the tertiary school have participated in PEP, an innovative multimedia course that’s based on Rawat’s international talks about topics such as peace, hope and appreciation. On Nov. 27 they had the opportunity to discuss what they were learning with him, ask him questions, and hear him speak at the school as part of its Annual Social Change Lecture series. A lot of students reported that PEP was having a profound impact on their lives.

“The program, additional than anything, has brought me self-awareness and the knowledge that peace comes from within — not outside,” said Mthetho Koyana. “I think I am presently additional peaceful-minded than before and can enter into a conflict situation and be able to calm the situation down. I can help bring about change and be the bigger man and fight for peace. Each and each one of us is the same regardless of backgrounds.”

Amid a world discourse often dominated by discussions of violence and politics, an extra student found Rawat’s message of personal peace empowering. “One of the majority significant things I learned is that although everyone is always talking about world peace and war and what that means, Prem Rawat has made me think about my own personal involvement. As he says, ‘peace starts with you,’” explained Monwabisi Mtshamba. “We, as individuals, have a part to play, and what is inside us manifests on the outside too. The tools I have learned in PEP have helped me be additional content and appreciate other people.”

Designated by numerous leading international organizations as an “Ambassador of Peace,” Prem Rawat has dedicated his life for the last five decades to addressing humanity’s essential need for peace. During the apartheid era, he was blacklisted by the South African government for refusing to abide by rules that banned him from speaking to mixed-race audiences. In additional recent years, he has regularly visited the country to speak to diverse groups, from troubled youth and prisoners to government leaders.

At TSiBA Rawat encouraged students to listen to their own hearts and chart their own course in life rather than be unduly influenced by social and political pressures. “Some people think peace is, ‘don’t be angry — just do exactly what I tell you to do and we’ll be in peace.’ That’s not peace. Peace is inside of you. Nurture it,” he said. “In your life, don’t go into the razzmatazz of thinking about what is fulfilling. Understand that fulfillment has to be felt. At the same time as you feel it and it is the real fulfillment, you will know. Do you enjoy being alive? Because if you don’t enjoy being alive, something is wrong.”

It was a message that resonated with Ndonwabile Ndengezi, a student who is preparing to graduate from TSiBA. “We grow up thinking that peace is something that exists somewhere in the world outside, which we need to find, but what we really need to achieve is internal peace. It’s within all of us, which allows us to transaction with any situation in a proper and humane way.”

Prem Rawat’s visit to South Africa as well included meetings with renowned social rights activist Desmond Tutu and other leaders, PEP students, and prison officials who facilitate the PEP program for inmates.

Related Articles
  • South Africa to extend ICT reach

    2016/06/19 While the expansion of mobile broadband and fibre-optic networks are driving increase of ICT services in South Africa, additional infrastructure investment will be needed to keep pace with rapidly rising market request. Focus on speed South Africa has a set of ambitious targets laid out in its national broadband policy, South Africa Connect, which includes achieving 50% internet coverage with speeds of 5 Mbps by 2016; roughly 90% coverage at the same speeds by 2020; 50% coverage with speeds of 100 Mbps by 2020; and universal 100-Mbps coverage by 2030.
  • South Africa’s push for renewables

    2016/06/18 Already the continent’s major producer of renewable energy, South Africa is moving to further reduce its reliance on hydrocarbons by expanding private sector investments in solar and wind projects, and introducing biofuels. Under the Renewable Energy Power Producer’s Programme launched in 2011, the contribution of independent power producers (IPPs) to generation is expected to reach approximately 7 GW by mid-2016, Tina Joemat-Pettersson, minster of energy, said in a budget address in mid-May. A further 1.8 GW of new renewable projects are currently being evaluated, with a decision on tenders to be announced later this year. Private investments since 2011 by IPPs in renewable capacity have topped R194bn ($12.3bn), a figure set to expand through this year, the minister said during the same speech. Given the scope and scale of new projects coming on-line, South Africa appears to be on course to achieve its renewable target of 17.8 GW by 2030, the minister added.
  • South Africa to limit farm sizes to speed land redistribution

    2016/05/22 South Africa's government is planning to impose limits on farm sizes to free up parcels of land to hand over to blacks, a minister said on Saturday, giving an insight into the workings of a divisive redistribution scheme. Gugile Nkwinti, the minister of rural development and land reform, told Reuters the government was planning to set a range of limits - from a 1,000-hectare (2,470-acre) "small-scale" farm, up to the major allowed, at 12,000 hectares. "If you are a small-scale farm and have 1,400 HA, we will buy the 400, and leave you with your 1,000. We will buy the additional and redistribute it to black people," the minister said.
  • Investec appointed to manage $670M fund for infrastructures in Africa

    2016/05/16 South African assets manager Investec Investment management has been appointed to manage a $670 million fund of Emerging Africa Infrastructure Fund (EAIF), a public-private partnership backed by the governments of UK, Holland, Sweden and Switzerland to finance infrastructure projects in sub Saharan Africa.
  • Routes Africa forum aims to improve African air connectivity

    2016/05/15  An event dedicated to the development of the African aviation industry will take place next month in Tenerife (26-28 June) to encourage the launch of new air services to, from and within the African continent. Routes Africa 2016 will help to improve African connectivity by bringing together airlines, airports and tourism authorities to discuss next air services. Around 250 route development professionals are expected to attend the forum which was founded ten years ago to stimulate increase in the industry.