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Thinkers Lodge Histories
Rome Office

Accademia Naz. Dei Lincei Via della Lungara 10 I-00165 Rome, Italy
Tel. (++39-06) 687-2606 Fax: (++39-06) 687-8376 Email: [email protected]

21 May 2014

Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs  - 1995 Nobel Peace Prize

From the Secretary General and Executive Director

To the students of Pugwash District High School,

We are writing to show our support for your plans to have a march and ribbon cutting on 22 May for the PeaceGround project. We are energized to hear about your efforts to learn more about the first conference held at Thinkers’  Lodge  in  1957.    As  you  know,  the  people who gathered there at that time felt the need to draw attention to their concerns about the new developments in science and technology that threatened the very existence of humanity. More than 17.000 nuclear weapons  are  still  bloating  the  world’s  arsenals  today,  while  new  and  other  threats  are   emerging.

The world needs you. We need your energy, your insight, and your  ‘new  thinking’  (as  Einstein,  Russell  and  others   called for in the 1955 Manifesto that led to that first important meeting in your home town). Understanding the past is an important step in moving toward a brighter future.

We look forward to sitting on those new thoughtfully decorated benches in the Peace Park upon our next visit to Pugwash. For now, we want you to know that your efforts have been noticed. As you recommit yourselves to the goals of that first meeting, so do we – right alongside you, even if from several time zones and an ocean away.

Joseph  Rotblat,  whose  Nobel  Peace  Prize  medallion  now  sits  with  pride  at  Thinkers’  Lodge,  ended  his  Nobel  address   with the following words:

The quest for a war-free world has a basic purpose: survival. But if in the process we learn how to achieve it by love rather than by fear, by kindness rather than by compulsion; if in the process we learn to combine the essential with the enjoyable, the expedient with the benevolent, the practical with the beautiful, this will be an extra incentive to embark on this great task. Above all, remember your humanity.

Your actions remind us of the sentiment behind this quote. By  combining  “the  practical”  (benches  for  contemplation) with  “the  beautiful”  (your artwork), you have taken some steps toward the challenge Jo Rotblat set for us all. We wish you sunshine on the day, and hope to see pictures of the event.

Best wishes,

Paolo Cotta-Ramusino  - Secretary General and Sandra Ionno Butcher Secretary General Executive Director