Föderation für Weltfrieden - Universal Peace Federation Austria

Föderation für Weltfrieden - Universal Peace Federation Austria Weitere infos unter www.weltfriede.at

"Beyond Institutions: Why Peace begins in Families and the Human Heart - Reflections on the SDG 16 Conference 2026 and t...
13/06/2026

"Beyond Institutions: Why Peace begins in Families and the Human Heart - Reflections on the SDG 16 Conference 2026 and the human foundations of peaceful societies"
Around the world today, many people sense a growing unease. Conflicts continue, trust in
institutions remains fragile, public debate is frequently polarized, and many communities
experience division where connection is urgently needed. Against this backdrop, the
upcoming SDG 16 Conference 2026 at the United Nations offers an important opportunity to
examine the deeper foundations of peaceful societies and to reflect on the conditions that
allow peace to endure.
https://publicadministration.desa.un.org/capacity-development/sdg16-conference/sdg16-conference-2026
For the Universal Peace Federation, this understanding has always been central. Lasting
peace begins with people. It grows through character, relationships and the values that
shape human conduct long before individuals enter public life.
Since its founding by Dr. Hak Ja Han and the late Dr. Sun Myung Moon, UPF has advanced
the vision that affirms the inherent dignity of every person and recognizes that humanity
flourishes when people learn to regard one another as members of one human family,
connected through shared responsibility and mutual respect.
This perspective carries particular significance at a time when many societies face
increasing polarization and diminishing opportunities for constructive dialogue. Healthy
societies depend upon citizens who can engage differences with respect, leaders who
understand public service as a moral responsibility, and communities prepared to cooperate
across religious, cultural and political boundaries.
Discussions of peace and justice deserve greater attention to the well-being of families.
Support for families represents a vital dimension of peacebuilding. Investments in healthy
family life, youth development, education and community support may receive limited public
attention, yet they address many of the conditions that influence whether conflict escalates
or communities remain resilient.
As preparations continue for the High-Level Political Forum on Sustainable Development
2026, there is an opportunity to recognize a reality that often receives insufficient attention:
sustainable development involves human and moral dimensions alongside technical and
institutional ones.
Effective institutions, justice, accountability and public trust remain essential. Compassion,
integrity, strong families and leaders guided by conscience are equally important foundations for social progress. Peace grows wherever people choose understanding over hostility,
service over self-interest and responsibility over indifference.
UPF remains committed to working with the United Nations, governments, civil society, faith
communities and local leaders who share this vision. Together, we can help build a culture of
peace rooted in effective institutions, responsible leadership, strong families and the
enduring values that unite the human family.
Dr. Tageldin Hamad
President, Universal Peace Federation

What happens in a society before a young person becomes radicalized? Before hatred turns into violence or disagreements ...
10/06/2026

What happens in a society before a young person becomes radicalized? Before hatred turns into violence or disagreements become crimes? From Bosnia and Herzegovina to Kosovo, Rwanda, and Pakistan, participants at an event at the United Nations in Vienna brought experiences from regions that have suffered wars, conflicts, and social divisions. Despite their diverse backgrounds, they reached a common conclusion: Crime prevention begins where people feel like part of society—and not its victims.

CCPCJ Side event - June 2nd 2026:
"THE RELEVANCE OF INTERRELIGIOUS COOPERATION FOR CRIME PREVENTION"
https://vimeo.com/1199217196?share=copy&fl=sv&fe=ci
Panelists:
JEAN-LUC LEMAHIEU, former Director of Policy and Public Affairs at the UNODC
AMBASSADOR DANKA SAVIC, Ambassador of Bosnia and Herzegovina to the OSCE/UN
DR. ANDRONIKI BARLA, Theologian and Orthodox canon lawyer
PROF. EJONA ICKA, Clinical Psychologist, UBT University Pristina, IAYSP Balkan Executive Director
DR. AFSAR RATHOR, former UN Executive (UN Peacekeeping Missions, UNIDO etc.)

This central question was the focus of a side event during the meeting of the United Nations Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice (CCPCJ) at the Vienna International Centre. The event, titled “The Relevance of Interreligious Cooperation for Crime Prevention,” was organized by the Universal Peace Federation (UPF) in cooperation with the Coalition of Faith-Based Organizations (CFBOs), the International Association of Youth and Students for Peace (IAYSP), and the United Nations Correspondents Association Vienna.

The event was opened by Mr. Peter Haider, President of the Universal Peace Federation Austria. In his welcoming remarks, he emphasized that the discussion about security should not be limited to state institutions and legal measures. Rather, the role of communities, religious groups, and civil society actors must also be considered when it comes to building trust and preventing conditions that foster violence and crime. In this context, Mr. Haider recalled the words of Martin Luther King Jr. and Nelson Mandela about the importance of dialogue, mutual understanding, and human encounter. Fear and hatred, he said, often arise where communication is lacking and prejudices take the place of personal experience.

One of the most insightful contributions was delivered by Jean-Luc Lemahieu, former Director of Policy Analysis and Public Relations at the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC). His remarks focused on young people and adolescents as a particularly vulnerable target group for any sustainable crime prevention strategy. Lemahieu pointed out that worldwide, a young person is killed by violence every seven minutes. At the same time, around 166 million young people between the ages of ten and nineteen live with diagnosable mental health problems or disorders. His central message, however, was that many risky behaviors do not stem from criminal intent, but from the need for belonging, recognition, and identity. Young people often don't weigh up "legal" and "illegal," but rather ask whether they want to be part of a group or excluded from it. Stable role models and positive social spaces—including educational, cultural, sports, and religious communities—are therefore particularly important, as they provide young people with orientation and a sense of belonging.

The Ambassador of Bosnia and Herzegovina to the United Nations and the OSCE in Vienna, Danka Savić, shared the experiences of a country still living with the consequences of a war that left deep societal wounds. She emphasized that extremism and violence rarely arise suddenly. Rather, they develop gradually when communities stop communicating with each other and people begin to retreat behind closed identities.

As a striking example, she cited the "Sarajevo Haggadah," one of the most important Jewish manuscripts in Europe, which was protected by people of different religious affiliations during various historical crises. For Savić, this story symbolizes the capacity of human solidarity to overcome religious and political boundaries. Interreligious dialogue, she believes, does not begin only after a crisis has erupted. Its true strength lies in creating trust and encounters before tensions even arise.

The institutional aspect was highlighted by Dr. Androniki Barla, an Orthodox theologian and canon lawyer from Greece. She emphasized that sustainable security cannot be guaranteed solely through prosecution and sanctions. Rather, interreligious cooperation is directly linked to the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goal 16, which aims to promote peaceful, just, and inclusive societies. Barla pointed out that the major religious traditions share fundamental values ​​– including respect for human dignity, non-violence, and responsibility towards others. Strengthening these values ​​can significantly contribute to fostering a culture of the rule of law and social cohesion.

The presentation by Professor Ejona Icka, clinical psychologist and director of the International Association of Youth and Students for Peace for the Balkan region, was particularly impressive. Drawing on her work in Kosovo, she described experiences from an international youth summit in Mitrovica, which brought together young people from different communities. She recounted how difficult it had been to build trust between young participants from different ethnic groups over several months. Only a seemingly simple question from her Orthodox husband about a church in her home parish overcame barriers that had existed for a long time within minutes.

For Icka, this was impressive proof that religion can build bridges when used as an instrument of encounter and not of division. She also emphasized that crime prevention begins in the family. Children learn not primarily through words, but through the behavior of adults, which they observe daily.

The event concluded with a presentation by Dr. Afsar Rathor, former UN official and representative of the Coalition of Faith-Based Organizations. Drawing on decades of experience in conflict regions such as Rwanda, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Somalia, and Kosovo, he emphasized that hatred does not begin with weapons, but with the loss of trust between people.

Rathor presented the work of the Coalition of Faith-Based Organizations in Pakistan, where Muslims, Christians, Hindus, and Sikhs work together on projects to promote social cohesion. He made it clear that respect for religious diversity is not only an ethical principle, but also an effective instrument for preventing extremism, violence, and crime.

Despite the different geographical, cultural, and religious perspectives of the speakers, a common message ran through the entire event: Safe societies are not created solely through punishments and security measures. Security begins where people experience belonging, where differences are understood not as a threat but as an opportunity for cooperation, and where trust becomes part of everyday social life. A common insight emerged from the experiences in Bosnia, Kosovo, Rwanda, and Pakistan: Crime cannot be prevented solely through sanctions, but primarily through building just, inclusive, and resilient communities. Where trust grows and people experience respect and recognition, hatred, extremism, and violence lose their breeding ground.

https://www.weltfriede.at/IntTagFamilie2026.htmIn 1993, the United Nations General Assembly declared May 15 the "Interna...
06/06/2026

https://www.weltfriede.at/IntTagFamilie2026.htm
In 1993, the United Nations General Assembly declared May 15 the "International Day of Families." The UN motto for 2026 – "Families, Inequalities and the Best Interests of Children" – underscores the inextricable link between strong families and the well-being of children. The UPF Austria, the Family Federation for World Peace, and the Austrian Women's Federation addressed this theme on May 30th 2026 in Vienna with a conference entitled "Family – School of Love: Strong Families, Happy Children." The UN motto for 2026 underscores that strong families and the well-being of children are inextricably linked.

"When Civilizations Listen - A reflection for the International Day for Dialogue among Civilizations, 10 June 2026"The I...
06/06/2026

"When Civilizations Listen - A reflection for the International Day for Dialogue among Civilizations, 10 June 2026"
The International Day for Dialogue among Civilizations, established by the United Nations
General Assembly resolution A/RES/78/286, invites humanity to pause and listen. Not only
to speeches, institutions or public declarations, but to the deeper voice of peoples, cultures
and spiritual traditions that have shaped the human story.
Civilizations are not walls. They are memories of human seeking. Each civilization has asked
how life can be meaningful, how families can endure, how communities can live with justice,
how suffering can be healed, and how the human heart can come closer to peace. Their
languages are different. Their sacred memories are different. Their histories are not the
same. Yet beneath these differences, there is a common longing for dignity, belonging and
love.
The Universal Peace Federation looks at this day through the conviction that humanity is
one family under God. This vision does not make cultures smaller. It gives them room to
breathe. It allows each group to bring their wisdom, wounds, beauty and hope into a larger
human conversation.
Dialogue begins when we stop treating the other as a category. A civilization cannot be
understood only through politics, conflict or fear. It has songs, prayers, mothers and fathers,
children, elders, memories of loss, and dreams of renewal. When people meet at that level,
dialogue is no longer a technique. It becomes an act of respect.
This is why interreligious and intercultural dialogue remain central to the work of UPF. Faith
traditions have formed the moral imagination of humanity. They have taught compassion,
restraint, forgiveness, service and reverence for life. When religious and spiritual leaders
meet with humility, they help civilizations remember their highest calling. When culture, faith and conscience meet in honest conversation, peace gains a human face.
UPF was founded by Dr. Hak Ja Han and late Dr. Sun Myung Moon with a vision that peace
grows through relationships of trust among leaders and citizens, religions and nations,
families and communities. In this sense, dialogue among civilizations is not far from daily life.
It begins when a person listens without preparing an accusation, speaks without humiliating
another, and recognizes that truth is not served by contempt.
Long before this United Nations observance was established, the founders of UPF were
already exploring dialogue among peoples through a remarkably broad lens. In the 1990s,
initiatives such as the Federation of Island Nations for World Peace, the Federation of
Peninsular Nations for World Peace and the Federation of Continental Nations for World
Peace sought to create spaces where nations could meet not only through ideology or
power, but through shared geography, memory and responsibility. Later, the Mongolian
Peoples’ Federation for World Peace opened another path of reflection on common roots,
scattered peoples and the healing of historical distance. These initiatives remind us that
civilizations are not only ideas in books. They live through oceans, peninsulas, continents,
steppes, borders, migrations, families and inherited dreams.
The world often speaks of division between East and West, North and South, tradition and
modernity. Yet the great concerns of our time cross every border. The search for peace, the
protection of the family, the care of creation, the dignity of the poor, the future of children and
the moral use of power belong to all civilizations. These concerns also stand close to the
spirit of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, because lasting development
depends not only on systems and resources, but also on trust, conscience and cooperation.
No one carries the whole answer alone. No person is without a gift.
On this day, UPF invites Ambassadors for Peace of the Universal Peace Federation,
partners and friends to see dialogue as a sacred discipline of peace. A conversation
between communities, a meeting among faith leaders, a cultural gathering, a youth forum, a
shared act of service or a quiet moment of prayer can become a small doorway through
which civilizations meet.
The future does not ask civilizations to disappear into sameness. It asks them to meet with a
deeper open heart. When civilizations listen to one another, humanity begins to remember
itself.
Dr. Tageldin Hamad
President, Universal Peace Federation

31/05/2026

Mai Cuc Moine: Vietnamesischer Tanz bei der Feier zum UNO-Tag der Familien
Text zum Tanz: "Du kommst aus dem Norden, ich aus dem Süden. Durch unsere Vereinigung werden unsere beiden Kontinente, die so lange durch Flüsse und Berge getrennt waren, endlich versöhnt sein. Bald wird das Lachen der Kinder, erfüllt von Freude und Glück, durch das ganze Land hallen!"

What happens in a society before a young person becomes radicalized? Before hatred turns into violence or disagreements ...
30/05/2026

What happens in a society before a young person becomes radicalized? Before hatred turns into violence or disagreements become crimes? From Bosnia and Herzegovina to Kosovo, Rwanda, and Pakistan, participants at an event at the United Nations in Vienna brought experiences from regions that have suffered wars, conflicts, and social divisions. Despite their diverse backgrounds, they reached a common conclusion: Crime prevention begins where people feel like part of society—and not its victims.

CCPCJ Side event - June 2nd 2026:
"THE RELEVANCE OF INTERRELIGIOUS COOPERATION FOR CRIME PREVENTION"
https://vimeo.com/1199217196?share=copy&fl=sv&fe=ci
Panelists:
JEAN-LUC LEMAHIEU, former Director of Policy and Public Affairs at the UNODC
AMBASSADOR DANKA SAVIC, Ambassador of Bosnia and Herzegovina to the OSCE/UN
DR. ANDRONIKI BARLA, Theologian and Orthodox canon lawyer
PROF. EJONA ICKA, Clinical Psychologist, UBT University Pristina, IAYSP Balkan Executive Director
DR. AFSAR RATHOR, former UN Executive (UN Peacekeeping Missions, UNIDO etc.)

This central question was the focus of a side event during the meeting of the United Nations Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice (CCPCJ) at the Vienna International Centre. The event, titled “The Relevance of Interreligious Cooperation for Crime Prevention,” was organized by the Universal Peace Federation (UPF) in cooperation with the Coalition of Faith-Based Organizations (CFBOs), the International Association of Youth and Students for Peace (IAYSP), and the United Nations Correspondents Association Vienna.

The event was opened by Mr. Peter Haider, President of the Universal Peace Federation Austria. In his welcoming remarks, he emphasized that the discussion about security should not be limited to state institutions and legal measures. Rather, the role of communities, religious groups, and civil society actors must also be considered when it comes to building trust and preventing conditions that foster violence and crime. In this context, Mr. Haider recalled the words of Martin Luther King Jr. and Nelson Mandela about the importance of dialogue, mutual understanding, and human encounter. Fear and hatred, he said, often arise where communication is lacking and prejudices take the place of personal experience.

One of the most insightful contributions was delivered by Jean-Luc Lemahieu, former Director of Policy Analysis and Public Relations at the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC). His remarks focused on young people and adolescents as a particularly vulnerable target group for any sustainable crime prevention strategy. Lemahieu pointed out that worldwide, a young person is killed by violence every seven minutes. At the same time, around 166 million young people between the ages of ten and nineteen live with diagnosable mental health problems or disorders. His central message, however, was that many risky behaviors do not stem from criminal intent, but from the need for belonging, recognition, and identity. Young people often don't weigh up "legal" and "illegal," but rather ask whether they want to be part of a group or excluded from it. Stable role models and positive social spaces—including educational, cultural, sports, and religious communities—are therefore particularly important, as they provide young people with orientation and a sense of belonging.

The Ambassador of Bosnia and Herzegovina to the United Nations and the OSCE in Vienna, Danka Savić, shared the experiences of a country still living with the consequences of a war that left deep societal wounds. She emphasized that extremism and violence rarely arise suddenly. Rather, they develop gradually when communities stop communicating with each other and people begin to retreat behind closed identities.

As a striking example, she cited the "Sarajevo Haggadah," one of the most important Jewish manuscripts in Europe, which was protected by people of different religious affiliations during various historical crises. For Savić, this story symbolizes the capacity of human solidarity to overcome religious and political boundaries. Interreligious dialogue, she believes, does not begin only after a crisis has erupted. Its true strength lies in creating trust and encounters before tensions even arise.

The institutional aspect was highlighted by Dr. Androniki Barla, an Orthodox theologian and canon lawyer from Greece. She emphasized that sustainable security cannot be guaranteed solely through prosecution and sanctions. Rather, interreligious cooperation is directly linked to the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goal 16, which aims to promote peaceful, just, and inclusive societies. Barla pointed out that the major religious traditions share fundamental values ​​– including respect for human dignity, non-violence, and responsibility towards others. Strengthening these values ​​can significantly contribute to fostering a culture of the rule of law and social cohesion.

The presentation by Professor Ejona Icka, clinical psychologist and director of the International Association of Youth and Students for Peace for the Balkan region, was particularly impressive. Drawing on her work in Kosovo, she described experiences from an international youth summit in Mitrovica, which brought together young people from different communities. She recounted how difficult it had been to build trust between young participants from different ethnic groups over several months. Only a seemingly simple question from her Orthodox husband about a church in her home parish overcame barriers that had existed for a long time within minutes.

For Icka, this was impressive proof that religion can build bridges when used as an instrument of encounter and not of division. She also emphasized that crime prevention begins in the family. Children learn not primarily through words, but through the behavior of adults, which they observe daily.

The event concluded with a presentation by Dr. Afsar Rathor, former UN official and representative of the Coalition of Faith-Based Organizations. Drawing on decades of experience in conflict regions such as Rwanda, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Somalia, and Kosovo, he emphasized that hatred does not begin with weapons, but with the loss of trust between people.

Rathor presented the work of the Coalition of Faith-Based Organizations in Pakistan, where Muslims, Christians, Hindus, and Sikhs work together on projects to promote social cohesion. He made it clear that respect for religious diversity is not only an ethical principle, but also an effective instrument for preventing extremism, violence, and crime.

Despite the different geographical, cultural, and religious perspectives of the speakers, a common message ran through the entire event: Safe societies are not created solely through punishments and security measures. Security begins where people experience belonging, where differences are understood not as a threat but as an opportunity for cooperation, and where trust becomes part of everyday social life. A common insight emerged from the experiences in Bosnia, Kosovo, Rwanda, and Pakistan: Crime cannot be prevented solely through sanctions, but primarily through building just, inclusive, and resilient communities. Where trust grows and people experience respect and recognition, hatred, extremism, and violence lose their breeding ground.

30/05/2026
15/05/2026

"Vesakh – Geburt, Erleuchtung und Eingang ins Pari-Nirvana des Buddha Siddhartha Gautama"
https://vimeo.com/showcase/12001373?video=1190264595
Veranstaltung am 6. Mai 2026 im Stephanisaal im Curhaus, Stephansplatz 3, 1010 Wien über das wichtigste Fest des Buddhismus.

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