Futures Leadership Network Nepal has launched a nationwide renaissance campaign to build a violence-free society by involving youth, reaching villages and settlements in 7 provinces.
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Youth have launched a renaissance campaign to free the country from the grip of violence while maintaining peace, stability, and political stability.
A campaign was launched from Lumbini, the birthplace of Buddha, on Tuesday to reach every corner of the country and engage the youth in a peaceful campaign for change by reaching out to them through interactions and rallies.
After the Genji movement, ‘The Futures Leadership Network Nepal’, formed under the initiative of the youth to increase their participation in peaceful politics, has launched a renaissance campaign to change the negative culture oriented towards violence.
A group of Genji and Gen Y youth including Sanjeev Sapkota, who lost his right arm in the Genji movement, activist Nigam Humagain, writer and journalist Ghanashyam Khadka, youth leaders Prakriti Dhakal, Meena Kumari Thakur, activist Indrajit Safi, water resources expert Devesh Belbase and advocate Ayusha Kandel, visited the Mayadevi Temple in Lumbini, the birthplace of Buddha, on Tuesday morning and started the campaign.
Immediately after that, they reached the rest area in Manigram, Tilottama Municipality, Rupandehi, and held a public meeting and interaction. Nigam Humagain, President of Future Leaders Network, said that they are on a campaign to reach villages and settlements by launching a revival campaign to raise awareness at the public level as the country is in a serious political crisis and the risk and danger of vested interests exploiting the youth's anger to create unrest in the country has increased.
We will hold an interaction and meeting in Birgunj, Madhesh Province on Poush 19, he said, 'In the same way, we will reach villages and settlements in 7 provinces.' We lead the youth from despair to hope and from anger to understanding,' said Chairman Humagain, 'We will eliminate bitterness and unite all three crore Nepalis in the sacred resolve to build a country.' In the
program, writer and journalist Ghanshyam Khadka, who is also the promoter of the Mindful Living Campaign, said that renaissance is the only best solution for peace and development, as even if violence changes power, it cannot change culture. 'We changed all the systems, but we could not change corruption and misrule,' he said, 'because even if people change, the trend remains the same. Violence and greed are encouraged until the mind is transformed. Therefore, it is more important to change the state of mind than to change the system,' he said.
Genji activist Sanjeev Sapkota, who lost his right hand in the Bhadra 24 incident, said that he was involved in the national renaissance campaign to change the face of the country. ‘I lost one hand while trying to change the country,’ Sapkota said, ‘Now I can’t clap with one hand, I need your other hand, that is cooperation and coexistence.’
At the program, Genji leader Prakriti Dhakal, water resources expert engineer Devesh Belbase, activist Indrajit Safi, Genji leader Mina Kumari Thakur, local Genji youth Suraj Pokharel and Shankar Bhusal emphasized that a renaissance campaign has been launched to unite the people of all geographies, including the Himalayas, the hills and the Terai, in a single garland of feelings and thoughts and to join hands in wise cooperation to save the country from crisis.
Chairman Humagain said that this campaign of discussion and dialogue from various angles on the topic of ‘Nepal, Glorious History, Present and Future’ will first reach the Terai and then the hill and mountain districts.
