Friday, June 18, 2010

Something more

People who tell you to just look after yourself and forget the other guy are operating on a basic misconception.

This video points shows why.



Happiness and strength endure only in the absence of hate. To hate alone is the road to disaster. To love is the road to strength. To love in spite of all is the secret of greatness. And may very well be the greatest secret in this universe.~~L. Ron Hubbard, founder of the Scientology relgion

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Scientologist--Empowering Youth in Africa

I wanted to share this story about Tim Bowles. Tim received the Freedom Medal of the International Association of Scientologists for his human rights work. Here is an article form the Scientology press office on his work in western Africa to empower youth and bring peace and equity to the region.

Tim Bowles and friend in Kpando, Ghana.
Tim Bowles, the Director of International Development of Youth for Human Rights International, recently returned from West Africa where he is working to implement sweeping human rights reforms. Scientology Today interviewed him about the program and what inspired him to do what he is doing.

Scientology Today: Tim, you have been very active with Youth for Human Rights International (YHRI), and have been concentrating recently on helping implement a YHRI program in Western Africa. What made you decide to take this project on, and why there?

Tim Bowles: I have held an abiding interest in assisting people in the most challenging areas of the world since my college days in the 1960s. I met Youth for Human Rights International President, Mary Shuttleworth, in early 2005 and agreed to volunteer on a few youth training projects. Traveling to assist the group with a regional conference in Ghana that year, I saw the need for broad human rights education in that region and this program developed from that realization.

Africa represents the worst and the best in humanity. West Africa particularly is the site of some of the most infamous atrocities since the close of World War II. Yet, for all the invitations the populace has had to descend into unrelenting hatred and retribution, I have found Africans intensely ready and willing to work for and secure survival for themselves, their communities and the continent's population as a whole.

While their desire and demand for change is obvious, they face enormous challenges. With all their natural resources, will the people of Africa be able to acquire the know-how they need to capitalize on them? Will they harness the greatest resource they have—the youth of their countries—through effective education programs? Will they be able to create and sustain the ethical, competent leadership and organization they need to actually pull out of the dwindling spiral of polarization, violence and destruction?

Some of the 30 high school level youth from Accra, Ghana, participating in this summer's Human Rights Leadership Project.

During my first visit in 2005 I was privileged to meet a group of committed African human rights activists. Together, we have been developing a West Africa leadership campaign dedicated not just to inspiring youth through human rights awareness but to training and equipping young people with the leadership tools necessary to play key roles in creating and sustaining just and prosperous societies in Africa over the coming critical decades.

Scientology Today: Can you describe the project that you are implementing there now?

Tim Bowles: Starting in March this year we began running a six-month-long youth leadership pilot project in the nations of Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone.

The project is our first step in enabling young, able African men and women to make human rights a reality in their communities. By also involving prominent local proponents of human rights as speakers and instructors, we are training high school students on leadership, organization and human rights advocacy and connecting them with leaders who can greatly assist them in accomplishing their purposes. The competition involves 30 students in each country, divided into two teams of 15 each, who are creating public awareness campaigns on human rights abuses. They are documenting their work in writing and with photography and video footage. The competitions in each country will culminate in August, 2008 with large, public events, where the teams of young people will present the results of their work with the help and support of local leaders, educators and the press.

Scientology Today: How did you come to create this competition?

Tim Bowles: I created this project based on what I learned through five recent trips I made to the region between July, 2005 and July, 2007. With these tours, and the able help of my African program directors Sammy Jacobs Abbey in Ghana and Joseph Jay Yarsiah in Liberia, we significantly increased student community activism and won expanding support from government, civil society and media for the implementation of human rights education.

What we hope to gain from this six-month human rights project is major, long-term support for the establishment of this African leadership campaign as an innovative and product-oriented initiative to be implemented throughout the continent.

Scientology Today: What difference is Youth for Human Rights making in these countries?

Tim Bowles: This is our second year of competitions in each of these three countries. We have been able to reach thousands of young people across the region and inspire humanitarian purposes and diligence in them to an extent we never imagined.

There is not a single young person with whom we are working in Sierra Leone and Liberia who has not been deeply affected by the bloody struggles only recently concluded there. And they see that human rights education is vital to bringing an end to the destruction they have experienced.

Tim, delivering a workshop to students in Freetown, Sierra Leon.

As one young participant put it, "Sincerely speaking I now understand my rights and how to protect those rights. As a leader I promise to teach anyone his or her rights and to make human rights expand in the world, especially in Sierra Leone."

Strong leaders dedicated to tolerance, peace and real justice are the key to transforming the prevailing despair into overriding confidence and development in these countries.

Scientology Today: What do you see as the most important human rights issues in the world today, and do you feel YHRI is helping to handle these?

Tim Bowles: Whether we're talking about populations emerging from genocide and civil conflict such as in Liberia or Sierra Leone, or peoples simply being empowered to reach out and help themselves as in Ghana, the most important human right is education. And this is true in Europe, the United States and anywhere on Earth where people are oppressed and need tools to improve their lives. Having the opportunity and ability to learn is fundamental to constructing and sustaining a future worth living in. The education and training of young leaders based on human rights values is of course key to this. The young people with whom we are working see this, and many have chosen to research and do presentations on education rights as their topic in the competitions.

Scientology Today: What do you recommend for anyone who is passionate about human rights?

Tim Bowles: I welcome them to join us and advance what we are doing here into other countries of course. The best move for anyone motivated to help improve human rights conditions is to get out there, see the realities for himself or herself and, whether on our successful model or some other innovation, to construct creative ways to engage young people particularly in solving human rights abuse. Getting started with any community betterment undertaking is a "which comes first—chicken or egg" proposition. The "egg" is the resources: money and volunteer support necessary to carry out a bright idea. A human rights project needs to demonstrate results quickly despite minimal means. The resources necessary to building that project into something bigger will come with tangible products, however modest it may be initially. Youth for Human Rights International has created educational materials—DVDs, publications and a teachers' handbook—and these are available for anyone to use to make the subject of human rights real to young people.

Scientology Today: Is there something about the Scientology religion that you feel particularly aligns with human rights and with YHRI in particular?

Tim Bowles: The broad support of dedicated Scientologists in YHRI's worldwide campaigns comes from the common commitment our parishioners have to the establishment of human dignity and integrity. The United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 60 years old this year, is the first truly international proclamation of basic human freedoms in all of recorded history. The Scientology religion is based on the principle of human rights for all people, as shown in the Creed of the Church of Scientology, written by L. Ron Hubbard in 1954. Scientology is all about attaining and sustaining responsibilities and freedoms across the spectrum of life. Thus, it's no surprise that for decades Scientologists have been working and fighting for the establishment of human rights.

Scientology Today: How has your experience in Scientology helped you in accomplishing your own humanitarian goals?

Tim Bowles: Scientology of course places the highest value on communication as the means to achieve increased understanding between individuals, family members, community groups and cultures. I can attribute the success of this leadership project to the skills I have attained through my Scientology studies, which have enabled me to communicate and work effectively with peoples from all walks of life and, perhaps more importantly, to the confidence I now have. No matter how challenging the circumstances, persistence along humanitarian lines guarantees humanitarian results.

Scientology Today: Do you have any other message for our readers?

Tim Bowles: When I first went to West Africa I was troubled and almost embarrassed about being with people, particularly in the refugee camps, who have so little resources and often so little hope. How could I, one individual, help so many people in such desperate circumstances? But it is now clear to me how profoundly we are bettering the lives of the young people we reach and through their work we are bettering the lives of whole populations now and in the decades to come.





Happiness and strength endure only in the absence of hate. To hate alone is the road to disaster. To love is the road to strength. To love in spite of all is the secret of greatness. And may very well be the greatest secret in this universe.~~L. Ron Hubbard, founder of theScientology relgion

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Video of what people think of the Scientology Volunteer Ministers




I have a number of friends who went to Haiti as part of the Scientology team down there. They all came back saying it was brutal but the most rewarding think they have ever done. We have Scientology volunteers there from as far away as Australia and Russia, and many from the US. And there are now about 600 local Scientology Volunteer Ministers teams set up to work there. This is tremendous as there are so many hundreds of thousands who were traumatized by the earthquake, and many speak only Creole. Having local VMs makes it possible to help at the correct orders of magnitude.

The Scientology Volunteer Ministers program was developed in 1976 by Scientology Founder L. Ron Hubbard. In the wake of 9/11, David Miscavige greatly expanded the scope of the program, which now includes Goodwill Tours throughout the world.


Happiness and strength endure only in the absence of hate. To hate alone is the road to disaster. To love is the road to strength. To love in spite of all is the secret of greatness. And may very well be the greatest secret in this universe.~~L. Ron Hubbard, founder of theScientology relgion