For A Be tter World
Robert Muller
Robert Muller
Poems For A Better World
Decide to
Decide to be happy............................................................................ 1 Decide to be healthy ........................................................................ 2 Decide to be peaceful ...................................................................... 3 Decide to be a spiritual person .................................................... 4 Decide to be thankful ...................................................................... 5 Decide to forgive ...............................................................................6 Decide to open yourself .................................................................. …show more content…
My latest book (in 4 volumes) is: Ideas And Dreams For A Better World. My books can be republished as Books For A Better World, my speeches as Speeches For A Better World, Essays For A Better World, Institutions For A Better World, my autobiography, A Life For A Better World, Actions For A Better World. I am thankful for having opened my eyes to this. Now all makes sense for me. I will even call my archives at the University for Peace: Archives For A Better World. What a positive world karma this would all mean! The people are craving for a better world. Let us mobilize them as co-workers for a better world. My 34 Robert Muller Schools and writing on education could be: Education For A Better World. There would even be Businesses For A Better World. All my life could make sense and every life on earth could make full sense. – Robert Muller 18 August 98 Each of us can do many things for a better world. Writing Decide to poems is one way to inspire ourselves to work for a better world. Here are two Decide to poems written by Barbara Gaughen - Muller. Robert Muller and Barbara Gaughen were married, June 27, 1997 …show more content…
His grandparents had five successive nationalities (French, German, French, German, French) without leaving their village as a result of three wars (1870-1871, 1914-1918, 1939-1945). Often as a child, Robert Muller would look out of his window at the border he could not cross and long for the day when he, like the birds, the clouds, the sun and the stars, would no longer have to observe the imaginary line. Today, thanks to the dream and effort of his compatriot Robert Schuman who similarly hated these borders, Robert Muller’s passport reads, “European Union” with the sub-title France, and he is free to cross all western European borders. Robert Muller knew the horrors of World War II, of being a refugee, of Nazi occupation and imprisonment. During the war he was a member of the French Resistance. After the war he returned home and earned a Doctorate of Law from the University of Strasbourg. In 1948 he entered and won an essay contest on how to govern the world, the prize of which was an internship at the newly created United Nations. Dr. Muller devoted the next 40 years of his life behind the scenes at the United Nations focusing his energies on world peace. He rose through the ranks at the UN to the official position of Assistant-Secretary-General. He has been called the “Philosopher” and “Prophet of Hope” of the