“You will find peace not by trying to escape your problems, but by confronting them courageously. You will find peace not in denial, but in victory.” —J. Donald Walters
The most important kind of freedom is to be what you really are. You trade in your reality for a role.- Mahatma Gandhi
“The Sword of Peace”- are you thinking, Sword and Peace, have no relation.
Go through this beautiful story.
Once upon a time, there was a precious sword. Now,
this sword belonged to a great King, and for as long as anyone could remember,
the King spent all his time in his palace, enjoying his shows and parties. One
day a great dispute broke out between this King and the King of a neighbouring country. It ended with both declaring war.
The sword was greatly excited at the prospect of
taking part in its first real battle. It would show everyone how truly brave
and special it was and would become renowned throughout the kingdom. On the
way to the front line, the sword imagined itself the winner of many battles.
However, when they arrived, the first battle had already taken place and the
sword got to see the results of war.
What it saw had nothing in common with what the
sword had imagined. No elegant shining knights, triumphant, with their weapons
gleaming in the sunlight. Instead, all the sword saw was broken weapons, and
hordes of hungry and thirsty men. There was hardly any food left. Everything
was covered in dirt and shrouded in a disgusting smell. Many were half dead and
scattered on the ground, bleeding from multiple wounds…
At this, the sword realized it liked neither wars nor battles. It
decided it preferred to live in peace and spend its time taking part in
tournaments and competitions. So, on the night before what was going to be the
big final battle, the sword tried to find a way to prevent it from taking
place. After a while, the sword started to vibrate. First, it gave out a low
buzz, but this gradually got louder, until it became an annoying metallic
noise. The swords and armour of the other soldiers asked the King’s sword what
it was doing. It told them “I don’t want there to be a battle tomorrow. I don’t
like war”.
One answered, “No one likes it, but what can we do?”
“Make yourself vibrate, just like I’m doing”, said the King’s sword. “If
we make enough noise no one will sleep.”
So the weapons started vibrating, and the noise became deafening. It was
so loud that it reached the enemy camp, and the weapons there, who were equally
sick of the war, joined the protest.
The next morning, when the battle should have begun, not a single
soldier was ready to fight. No one had managed to get even a wink of sleep, not
even the Kings or the Generals. So they spent the whole day catching up on
sleep. During the evening they started to wake up and decided to put off the
battle for the next day.
However, the weapons, led by the King’s sword, spent the night repeating
their peace song, and again no soldier could rest. The battle had to be
postponed yet again, and this carried on for the next seven days. On the
evening of the seventh day, the Kings of the two armies met to see what they
could do about the situation. Both were furious from their previous dispute,
but after being together for a while they started to discuss their sleepless
nights, the surprise on their soldier’s faces, the confusion of day with night,
and the amusing situations all this had created.
It wasn’t long before both were laughing, like friends, at these little
stories. Fortunately, they forgot their old disputes and they put an end to the war,
each returning to their own land with the double joy of not having had to
fight, and having regained a friend. And from then on, from time to time the
Kings would meet up to talk about their experiences as Kings. They now
understood that the things which united them were much more numerous than
anything that set them apart from each other.
Wars and battles
are not romantic, and that we can all do something to bring about peace.
Bloom BHIS@ Billabong High International School, Thane.
- Priya Wagle, Manisha Joshi, Rinku Lapasia, Ranjana Solanki, Sharanjeet Kaur, Manjit Kaur, Savita Rane.
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