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Neighborly Day!

While we may not know who will commit the next violent crimes, where and how they’ll be committed, and for what reason, we’re nonetheless certain violent crimes would be committed against innocent people by folks who needed our neighborly interventions.

Friday, the Neighborly Day, is therefore the best day during the week to check on our neighbors and perhaps impact their lives positively. “We must never, ever normalize crime, violence, abuse, injustice, bias, inequity, poverty, violent extremism or oppression, since they’re not inevitable.

In addition, the outcome of all our actions and interactions must be peaceful coexistence. We should not patronize violent movies and media or ignorantly call violent Hollywood figures heroes. They are not. Real heroes are our mothers whom we honor on Neighborly Days and all other days.”

Just minding our own business in this day and age is no longer an acceptable attitude. We are one human family that should be mindful of all elements from within in order to provide timely assistance to those in need, disrupt evil plans being hatched and prevent heinous crimes that could be carried out by the unhinged family members, especially on Neighborly Days.

Another word, every Neighborly Day gives us a unique opportunity to have intimate interactions with our neighbors in order to learn firsthand how to be helpful to them and when we know something that warrants immediate action, we intervene. It is our neighborly business to be in the know for preventive sake!

We can prudently invest in prevention and peaceful coexistence or foolishly spend in reacting to violence and hatred. The choices are clear and ours.

PUBLIC SAFETY DINNERS:

Those who have not been participants to our Weekly Community Dinners can start participating now. 

We live in close proximity with each other without having meaningful social or neighborly interactions. We often times come together only when tragedy strikes although we may live on the same block, send our children to same schools and go to the same medical centers.

We formed opinions about each other, mostly negative, without having invested time and effort to know each other. We usually generalized folks, for example the Africans, Arabs, Chinese, Indian, Europeans, Christens, Hindus, Buddhists, Jews, Muslims, whites, blacks, etc…

Through these community peace dinners, we become true neighbors. We talk to each other as neighbors. We discuss our common interests and mutual desires. We break bread together. We learn about each other intimately. We develop love for one another through understanding more of each other’s backgrounds, cultures, traditions, values, spirituality, priorities, etc…

These dinners therefore disrupt individual loneliness, depression, and vulnerability. We become parts of each other and support mechanism to one another. We become informed neighbors and protectors of our neighborhoods. With this developed neighborliness, we embrace diversity and collective commitment to the quality of life for all.

This brings public safety, public harmony and collective public wellness. The dinners save precious lives and finite public resources.

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