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Message of Love to Pakistan from Indian Schoolchildren
AMRITSAR, Punjab, India: Indian schoolchildren writing on what is being called the world's largest love letter by Friends Without Borders at Jalianwala Bagh in Amritsar March 19. Teams of Friends Without Borders have traveled throughout India collecting signatures and messages on the letter. On March 20, they set out to Lahore in Pakistan carrying the letter. (AFP Photo, India West March 24, 2006)
Pakistani children reply with their own love letter (April 5, 2006)
*From Pakistan with love, Live Pakistan.com, April 05, 2006 (Received via Sanjay Tulankar
sanjaytulankar@yahoo.com)
It seems that the only logical conclusion for peace is to look for it in children, the message is so simple that it just might ring true, said Maria Durana, a partner with friends without borders, the leading organisation behind the Worlds largest love letter.
The letter, which has travelled throughout India, collecting the sentiments and hopes of Indian children from various schools, districts and even remote villages has finally reached its recipients in Pakistan, and the gesture is now being returned with equal enthusiasm.
Hundreds of children from schools all over Lahore have signed the golden strip in the letter, which is now being referred to as the golden bridge for peace. The 86,400 square foot letter (360 feet by 249 feet) was first unveiled in Bangalore on January 16 and has since travelled throughout India, growing in both size and sentiment.
Individual pieces of the letter were separated into banners and marched down the streets of Ahmedabad by children from different faiths including children from mosques, synagogues, churches and temples throughout the city.
The letter-head message reads, Dear children of Pakistan, lets join our hearts in friendship. Together we can make a better world.
Students from Lahore Grammar School, the Convent of Jesus and Mary, Aitchison College for Boys, Beaconhouse and SOS village were among the hundreds of children who gathered at the Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore today to sign the golden strip, which would be returned to India.
Children painted posters and chanted slogans of peace for hours, also joining in a song composed for the occasion, linking both countries in a united quest for friendship. We hope for a lasting friendship with our Indian brothers and sisters and we hope that this letter would help us make friends, said Ali Raza from SOS village.
I think this is the best gift from India and hope that we can get more and more signatures and letters to show how much love we have for our Indian brothers and sisters, said Aaliya Durrani, a student from Lahore Grammar School.
This letter shows how much love there can be between the two countries if we could only learn to choose friendship over enmity and peace over war. We should tell people in India that we are willing to do so, said Nosheen Sadiq, another Grammar School student.
Messages such as, East or west, cant we both be the best? by Priya from Chandigarh and, To my brothers and sisters in Pakistan - all we need is real friendship, if it is real it will last through anything by K Sathya Murti from St Josephs Indian Middle School in Bangalore showed honest emotions are all it really takes to break boundaries.
The aim of this exercise is to promote person-to-person contact through schools and Friends Without Borders. We have received 11,000 letters from Indian children so far and hope Pakistani children will reciprocate their gesture, said Maria Durana.
It is impossible to not be moved by this unprecedented gesture of peace, which is proving to be more powerful than most others in the past, said Saad Anwar, a visitor. The millions of scribbled and scrawled emotions that this letter carries leads one to believe that the apathy that exists between both countries may actually be resolved and that children may be just the ones to do it.
We aim to take the golden strip of the letter back to India as the response from Pakistan, and the rest of the letter which is made from canvas and is durable, will be sent as tent material to the October 8 earthquake victims. The 196 pieces of the border to the letter will be sent to different schools in Pakistan as souvenirs to encourage contact between students of both countries, said Raza Shahid, a volunteer.
The letter, which may be listed as the largest card in the Guinness Book of World Records, has fast assumed the proportions of a massive campaign. With a documentary film by award winning filmmaker Gopi Desai underway, a book-deal with Mapin Publishing and an army of volunteers, the organization launch a movement for peace among children of both countries.