Atlas of Nonviolence

“On 10 November 1998, the United Nations General Assembly proclaimed the period 2001-2010 the International Decade for a Culture of Non-Violence and Peace for the Children of the World”. In its reasoning, it considered that “a culture of non-violence and peace facilitates respect for the life and dignity of every human being without prejudice or discrimination of any kind.”  For defenders of peace and human dignity, this declaration was the first recognition by governments and states, which have made violence a priori in their constitutions and their relations with their societies and the world, that the future of childhood, that is, tomorrow, requires a radical change in their view of ideological, political and societal violence, in order for the cry of 1945: Never again to have meaning and structure.

The desired decade began with the catastrophe of September 11, 2001, the globalization of the state of emergency and the declaration of war, with or without the blessing of the Security Council. The start of the twenty-first century looked bleak.

Through words, concepts, personalities and facts, Haytham Manna tries to deconstruct the logic of resorting to violence or its “legitimacy” nationally and internationally, and shed light on important intellectual and militant beacons that have made the subject of non-violence not only a basic moral and behavioral thesis for the future of people, but also the first choice for their salvation.

Haytham Manna is an intellectual and activist who studied medicine, anthropology and international law in Syria and France. One of the founders of the Arab Committee for Human Rights. He wrote on human rights, democracy, women’s rights, Islam and Enlightenment issues. He has published about sixty books and works in Arabic, English and French, most notably the encyclopedia “Reflection on Human Rights”, “The Future of Human Rights”, “Civil Resistance” and “Building Citizenship”, headed by the Scandinavian Institute for Human Rights / Haytham Manna Foundation.

 

Hachette Antoine 2023

You can find it at the following link (antoineonline.com)

 

Introduction

The importance of the philosophy of nonviolence in human societies, some of its symbols, experiences and its current civil and political presence,

Jean-Marie Muller

(1939-2021)

His life, his struggles and his philosophy of nonviolence

Civil disobedience

CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE

Rights to civil resistance

Martin Luther King (1929 – 1968)

  1. L. KING

Resistance for Civil Rights

MOHAMED MANDOUR 1907-1965

Defender of human rights and peace

MAHATMA GHANDI 1869-1948

Non-violence and national liberation

TAKFIR

In the means of producing societal and ideological violence

On the means of production of violence

Civil resistance

In concept and practice

Universality of civil resistance

Nonviolence in the Arab world

Freedom

LIBERTY/ LIBERTE

In Tawiyah

ON TAOISME

Anti-power and peace of mind

Counter-power and peace of the soul

BARTOLOMEO DE LAS CASAS

1474-1566

 

Human beings are born free and equal

People are born free and equal

KHALIL JIBRAN

War, or the weapon of mass destruction

War crimes

War is a crime in itself

War is a crime in itself

Abdallah al Hamed

1950-2020

The Unknown Soldier of Non-Violence in the Arabian Peninsula

The unknown soldier of nonviolence in Arabia

ABDALLAH AL – ALAILI

1914-1996

On the prohibition of war

Prohibition of war

Corporal punishment

BODY BUILDINGS

In the safety of the soul and the body

About physical and mental integrity

TIANANMEN 1989

Place of civil resistance

Civil Resistance Square

NELSON MANDELA

1918-2013

From the war of liberation to non-violent liberation

From the war of liberation, from apartheid to non-violence, a means of salvation from apartheid

Inquisition

INQUISITION

THE STATE INQUISITION/ MIHNA

In the means of producing societal and ideological violence

On the means of production of violence

MAZDAK

Prophet of non-violence

The prophet of non-violence

Badsha Khan

1890-1988

Gandhi of Islam in India

Gandhi Islam in India

1928-2018

Was Jane Sharpe a non-violence  Machiavelli?

Ephrem the Syrian

306-373

The message of Christ without original sin

Carl von Clausewitz

1780-1831

Machiavelli of war

Violence: A Multidisciplinary Approach

-violenceTolerance and non

Building a tolerant character

The construction of the tolerant personality

Insights and ammunition

Treasures of Wisdom