Adriana Aquino
  • Female
  • Asunción
  • Paraguay
Share on Facebook
Share on Facebook MySpace
 

Always Learning!!!

Profile Information

When it comes to peace, how would you describe yourself?
I am a pacifist
What do you believe are the 'burning issues' today?
Poverty, Violence, Human Rights
So what is it?
because the people want more money, and They don't want to share
What must we overcome to achieve peace?
Economic disparities
Can we change the world?
Definitely
More about me
I'm a person who likes read and write.
Promise to respect others and refrain from spamming?
Yes

Adriana Aquino's Photos

  • Add Photos
  • View All

Adriana Aquino's Videos

  • Add Videos
  • View All

Comment Wall (20 comments)

You need to be a member of iPeace.us to add comments!

Join iPeace.us

At 10:38am on June 18, 2010, Eva said…
Hello,

iPeace is deleted from David Califa the end of June. Here you can find a new home.

http://peaceformeandtheworld.ning.com/

You are cordially invited.

Warm regards, Eva
At 6:08am on January 8, 2010, Charlina Cecena said…
At 8:03am on January 1, 2010, WARIS ALI said…
Hi Adriana

I am here just to wish you the 2010 a very happy year filled with peace and prosperity.

Global Citizen
Waris Ali
At 4:44am on December 1, 2009, mody Ibrahem said…
Love Rain Over Me Pictures, Images and Photos
GLAD TO MET YOU ADRIANA ,
KEEP IN TOUCH,
LOVE,PEACE UPON YOU
KISSES..
MODY.
At 6:06pm on November 22, 2009, ZAM Abdel said…
Hello dear freind Adriana, lovely to meet You
Thank you very much for the Friendship !

Much Love & Peace & Many Blessings to You,
Abdel
At 2:56pm on November 22, 2009, Kalsi : We are all one . said…
Hi ! thanks a lot for your kind gift . Please be my friend. Thanks and my best wishes !!!
At 12:43am on October 30, 2009, Warren Jeffrey Motter said…
Here's me, singing, "People Are Strange," last weekend (the first I've actually sung publicly for months). As to what happened to the first portion of the song, a ghost stole it, for Halloween. The trick is on me.
People are strange when you're a stranger,
Faces look ugly when you're alone.
Women seem wicked when you're unwanted,
Streets are uneven when you're down.

When you're strange
Faces come out of the rain.
When you're strange
No one remembers your name
When you're strange,
When you're strange,
When you're strange.

All right, yeah!

People are strange when you're a stranger,
Faces look ugly when you're alone.
Women seem wicked when you're unwanted,
Streets are uneven when you're down.

When you're strange
Faces come out of the rain
When you're strange
No one remembers your name
When you're strange
When you're strange
When you're strange
Alright yeah
When you're strange
Faces come out of the rain
When you're strange
No one remembers your name
When you're strange
When you're strange
When you're strange
At 12:56am on July 20, 2009, tim max said…
HOLA !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
At 8:59pm on May 13, 2009, ZAM Abdel said…
Hi Adriana
I'm from Tunisia & I liked your friendship
Many Love, light, peace& Many Blessings to You,
Abdel
At 10:44pm on January 8, 2009, Rene Wadlow said…
2009 : The International Year of Reconciliation

Rene Wadlow



The United Nations General Assembly has proclaimed in Resolution A/61/L22, the year 2009 as the International Year of Reconciliation “recognizing that reconciliation processes are particularly necessary and urgent in countries and regions of the world which have suffered or are suffering situations of conflict that have affected and divided societies in their various internal, national, and international facets.” The Resolution was introduced by Nicaragua’s representative who stated that “reconciliation between those estranged by conflicts was the only way to confront today’s challenges and heal wherever fraternity and justice were absent from human relations.”



Yet we need to ask how can genuine reconciliation take place between people and groups with bitterly held beliefs and a violent history? How can the needs for national healing be reconciled with the demands for justice by the victims of terrible violence?



The General Assembly resolution gives a partial answer by stressing that “dialogue among opponents from positions of respect and tolerance is an essential element of peace and reconciliation.”



For there to be a respectful dialogue among opponents, certain barriers that prevent negotiations must be dismantled as a sign of a willingness to enter into a process of negotiations. Some barriers are physical, some psychological, others ideological. These barriers must be overcome if we are to progress on the long road to reconciliation. Let us, with the New Year, start now both as individuals and as members of movements in the spirit of the historian Howard Zinn’s “People are Practical”



They want change but feel powerless, alone,

do not want to be the blade of grass that

sticks up above the others and is cut down.

They wait for a sign from someone else

who will make the first move, or the second.

And at certain times in history

there are certain intrepid people who take the risk

that if they make that first move others will follow

quickly enough to prevent their being cut down.

And if we understand this, we

might make that first move.



…And if we do act, in however small a way,

we don’t have to wait for some grand utopian future.

The future is an infinite succession of presents,

and to live now as we think human beings should live,

in defiance of all that is bad around us, is itself

a marvellous victory.



Rene Wadlow, Representative to the UN, Geneva, Association of World Citizens
 
 
 

Latest Activity

Lucy Williams updated their profile
Jul 5, 2023
Sandra Gutierrez Alvez updated their profile
Oct 1, 2022
DallasBoardley updated their profile
Feb 8, 2022
RADIOAPOLLON1242 AIGOKEROS PANOS updated their profile
Feb 2, 2022
Shefqet Avdush Emini updated their profile
Jul 2, 2021
Ralph Corbin updated their profile
Jun 25, 2021
Marques De Valia updated their profile
Mar 24, 2021
SSEAYP - South-East Asian Youth liked David Califa's discussion Flash Banners Here
Feb 29, 2020

© 2024   Created by David Califa. Managed by Eyal Raviv.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service