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18th International Human Unity
Conference
Munich, Germany
October 29-30, 1999
Masami Saionji was one of the keynote speakers
at the 18th International Human Unity Conference. Other speakers
included Father Maximilian Mizzi of Assisi, Sant Rajinder Singh
of India, Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Lech Walesa of Poland, and
other humanitarians, spiritual leaders and educators.
All
problems, no matter what they may be, come from within our individual
selves. They do not come from others. Nor do they arise outside
of us.
Problems are caused by feelings hidden within our hearts, such
as dissatisfaction, intolerance toward others, vanity, greed, and
competitiveness. Our problems also arise from the hunger to acquire
more and more. Problems come from our boundless desire to increase
our possessions and expand our power and authority.
The problem is not race, religion, nationalism, discrimination,
or persecution. Rather, it is ourselves. It is our very own consciousness...
We each have the power to create our own situation, and in fact,
we did create our own situation. We are responsible for itno
one else.

Lecture at Inner Mongolia University
Hohhot, Inner-Mongolia
September 2, 2000
Addressed to three hundred students and teachers
at the Inner Mongolian University.
There are no boundaries between young people. You young people
have the open mind to respect one another as equals and join hands...
Education and knowledge are both important, but the most important
thing is your inner wisdom and self-respect. You have the power
to change the world.

International Symposium:
Medicine at the Beginning of the 3rd Millenium
Medicine, Humanism and Peace
Warsaw, Poland
May 5, 2001
Masami Saionji was invited as a guest speaker at
the international symposium on Medicine at the Beginning of
the 3rd Millennium hosted by the Albert Schweitzer World Academy
of Medicine and the Polish Academy of Medicine in Warsaw. She spoke
on the theme Reverence for Life, one of the main principles
of the Goi Peace Foundations Declaration for All Life on Earth,
also a concept formulated by Albert Schweitzer.
As our firm sense of identity as members of one global family
develops, we will inspire ourselves to cherish and protect all life
on this planet, and work together to halt the destruction of the
environment, the extinction of species, and countless other problems.
Each individual has a unique mission, or role to play, in creating
a peaceful future for the earth. And the greatest mission that each
of us holds is to fill our heart with love, harmony and gratitude.
Step by step, as each individual returns to the spirit of harmony,
we shall bring harmony to the world.

The Global Peace Initiative
of
Women Religious & Spiritual Leaders
Geneva, Switzerland
October 6-10, 2002
Masami Saionji was one of the speakers at the historic
summit of women religious, spiritual, business and government leaders,
who came together from around the world to forge a partnership for
building reconciliation and healing in regions of conflict.
The only way to change our earth, I feel, is for each human being
to change their way of thinking and return to their essential belief
in life itself. In other words, everyone living on this planet will
have to rise above their ego and awaken to their higher, global
consciousness.
Now, at this point in history, the time is ripe for this awakening.
Now, when humanity is standing at the brink of destruction, let
us make the best use of the moment for offering human beings a way
to cut through the cycles of our past causes and effects, and take
one step forward in the evolution of our consciousness.

Conference on Youth and Human
Values
Geneva, Switzerland
October 8-11, 2002
Youth leaders between the ages of 18-30 from 78
countries participated in the Conference on Youth and Human Values,
organized by the International Society for Human Values, for an
intergenerational dialogue on some of the great challenges of our
time. Masami Saionji addressed the youth participants in a plenary
session on the topic of "Youth and Violence."
In the past generations we created many kinds of violence: the
violence of war and oppression, the violence of rape and child abuse,
discrimination, intimidation, and environmental destruction.
Until now, society has tried to quell these various kinds of violence
with more violence. We have even taken pride in these efforts using
words like: "the fight against disease," "the fight
against poverty," "the fight against discrimination, the
war on crime," and now, "the war on terrorism." Yet
after pouring so much energy into fighting against violence, what
has been the result? Even one look at today's world situation should
give us the answer. Violence cannot bring an end to violence. It
may briefly suppress it at a particular time and place. But, in
the end, fighting against violence only adds fuel to violence. Someday
it erupts again, even more forcefully.

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