COVER STORY

For
the Prout movement to play an active role in the future, it is
important that Prout should redefine itself to meet the challenges of
the future. It is only then that it will meet the changing needs of the
society and become a viable movement.
Understanding the
futures of any movement is by definition problematic. The future, for
one, does not yet exist (except from perhaps an absolute spiritual
perspective wherein past, present and future exist simultaneously).
Yet, it is possible to identify certain patterns within all movements.
Charles Paprocki has analysed the rise and fall of social movements
based on Sarkar’s Wave Theory. He argues that new movements appear once
old movements (cosmologies, ideologies and the institutions that
support them) cannot sustain legitimacy. The old movement dies because
of its own internal contradictions; that is, its inability to maintain
agreement or belief. By providing a more coherent analysis and
explanation of reality, the new movement challenges the past and, if it
is successful, becomes the new thesis.
FOCUS ON...
As
Communism and Capitalism fail to meet the expectations of the people,
the masses are in search of an alternative economic system which can
meet their requirements.
for Renaissance Universal (RU)
Johan
Galtung, fluent in nine languages and author of hundreds of articles
and numerous books including Theories and Methods of Social Research,
The True Worlds, Essays in Peace Research, v.1-5, founded the
International Peace Research Center in Oslo and the Journal of Peace
Research. He has taught at numerous universities throughout the world
and was Director of the United Nations University's "Goals, Processes
and Indicators of Development" Project. He was recently awarded the
Right Livelihood award--"The Alternative Nobel"--for his humanitarian
work. He is presently teaching Peace Studies at the University of
Hawaii. He has been aware of PROUT and specifically Sarkar’s theory of
social cycles for many years now. Recently, he was asked to referee an
article titled "Sarkar's Spiritual Dialectics," for the international
journal Futures and commented "Sarkar will probably stand out as one of
the truly great in this century, so much deeper and more imaginative
than most of Western narrow efforts to look into the future." For
these reasons, Renaissance Universal decided to interview Galtung to
gain insight into his vision of the future as well his perspectives on
PROUT.
Sohail Inayatullah is a political scientist/futurist in
Hawaii. He works for the Judicial system and various think tanks. He
has been involved with Renaissance Universal for 12 years and has
written extensively on futuristics as well as PROUT.
The main
focus of this interview is human rights and ecological balance Both the
issues are quite relevant of our times and are a great concern
worldwide.
Expectations from new regimeNow,
with the new government in power, it is high time that it works in a
way that tangible changes are visible in the decaying Indian
administrative system. If the GOI fails to realise this or work towards
it, it might also be uprooted the way earlier non-functional
governments were.
DEFEATING THE TALIBAN: ONE JOKE AT A TIMETo
win every battle, one needs a strategy. So, if the world community
wants to defeat Taliban, it needs to use the same tools through which
Taliban has gained legitimacy. Muslims all over the world need to be
told how Taliban is against the spirit of Islam and only then can we
expect public support in the battle against Taliban.