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BEIJING, Aug 26 (Xinhuanet) -- More than 200 WWII
veterans around the world will gather in Beijing this September to sign a peace
declaration marking the 60th anniversary of the victory in World War II.
"Love life and cherish peace are the tenets," said Jiang Beichen, the drafter of the Beijing Declaration
for Peace, on Friday.
The veterans, as both witnesses and survivors of the
war, are"the most qualified to help us learn more about history," said Jiang.
Numerous declarations for peace have been made to
remember the historic events and people who sacrificed themselves for peace,yet
none was signed in the name of the veterans. "We have missed something here," he
said in an interview with Xinhua.
According to him, this is the first declaration to be
signed by WWII veterans. It will be engraved on the 10-meter-high,60-meter-long
Peace Wall, located in a park in suburban Beijing,in Chinese, English, French,
Russian and Spanish.The idea was originally proposed by veterans who joined a
big Sino-foreign gathering. "The veterans aspire to leave something of their own
to future generations," Jiang said.
The Organizing Committee of the Beijing Declaration
for Peace was established by Jiang and other volunteers in June 2005 with the
main objective of launching the drafting work of a peace declaration in the name
of the veterans.
"We exchanged views with relevant veteran
organizations in the United States like the Flying Tigers and solicited veterans
for their opinions," Jiang said.
Jiang himself was impressed by the warm response from
US veterans. "John Rossi, a former pilot of the Flying Tigers, said he would
come to sign his name on the declaration even if he were in a wheelchair."
Jiang hoped the declaration could make young people
more aware of the significance of peace, and cherish peace and life.The 56-word
peace declaration reads:
"Yesterday, we served in the armed forces. Sixty
years ago, we experienced the Second World War.
Today, we are the survivors. Sixty years later, we
are the last witnesses of that war.
Tomorrow, for our children, grandchildren, and for
coming generations, our hope is for better tomorrows.
Here we declare our hopes: "Love life. Cherish peace."
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