The Last
Choice before Humanity - Global Appeal for Peaceful Coexistence and Survival of Mankind

By: Anil K. Jain, FCA – Sr. Macroeconomist
(Mail: caindia@hotmail.com)
Human civilisation today stands at the most
dangerous crossroads in history. Never before has mankind possessed such
extraordinary scientific progress and, simultaneously, such terrifying,
destructive power. The modern world has conquered oceans, reached the moon,
created artificial intelligence, and unlocked the secrets of the atom. Yet
humanity still struggles to conquer hatred, ego, greed, aggression, and the
obsession for domination.
Today, the greatest danger to mankind is not
poverty, disease, or economic recession. The greatest danger is war —
especially nuclear war.
The philosophy of non-violence and peaceful
coexistence is no longer merely a moral ideal or spiritual aspiration. It is
now an absolute necessity for the survival of mankind on this earth. Humanity
has reached a stage where even a minor military miscalculation, technological malfunction,
cyberattack, political provocation, or accidental missile launch can trigger
catastrophic retaliation between nuclear-armed nations.
As Mahatma Gandhi wisely said: “Non-violence is the greatest
force at the disposal of mankind.” And today, this truth has become
more urgent than ever before.
The Nuclear Reality Humanity
Cannot Ignore:
At
present, several nations possess nuclear weapons of unimaginable destructive
capacity. A single modern thermonuclear weapon is many times more powerful than
the bombs that devastated Japan during the Second World War. Thousands of such
weapons remain deployed across the world, many of them on high alert, ready to
be launched within minutes. Humanity is living under a permanent shadow of
destruction.
Even a small accidental conflict between nuclear
powers could unleash chain reactions beyond human control. Once nuclear
missiles are launched, there may be no possibility of reversing the
catastrophe. Radiation, firestorms, environmental devastation, and nuclear
winter would not recognise national borders, religions, political ideologies,
or economic status.
The Tragedy of Japan — A Warning
to Humanity:
The world
has already witnessed the horror of atomic destruction. In August 1945, atomic
bombs were dropped on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki during the
closing days of the Second World War. Those explosions were comparatively small
when measured against today’s nuclear arsenals. Yet the devastation was beyond
imagination. Entire cities were reduced to ashes within moments. If such
devastation was caused by relatively primitive atomic weapons, one can only
imagine the consequences of a large-scale modern nuclear conflict involving
multiple countries.
Albert Einstein once warned: “I know not with what weapons
World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and
stones.”
The Failure of Violence:
History
repeatedly proves that violence may impose temporary control, but it never
creates permanent peace. Wars destroy infrastructure, economies, families,
morality, and human trust. They leave behind bitterness that continues for generations.
The philosophy of peaceful coexistence teaches humanity to respect diversity,
sovereignty, cultures, religions, and human dignity. Dialogue, diplomacy,
patience, compassion, and mutual understanding are the only sustainable paths
toward global stability.
As Martin Luther King Jr. said: “We
must learn to live together as brothers or perish together as fools.”And
today, mankind truly faces that choice.
A Direct Appeal to World Leaders:
On behalf
of Ahimsa Foundation India, this article makes a heartfelt and urgent
appeal to the world’s political leadership. We appeal to leaders including:
Please rise above political ego, military ambition,
strategic competition, ideological conflicts, economic domination, and the race
for control over natural resources. No political victory can justify the
destruction of humanity. Humanity
expects world leaders to ensure that no accidental nuclear launch, technical
malfunction, miscommunication, or reckless provocation ever pushes mankind
toward irreversible disaster.
A Call to Global Institutions:
This is
also a moment of responsibility for global institutions. We appeal to the United
Nations to act with greater moral courage, neutrality, and urgency in
preventing wars and promoting peaceful settlements of disputes. We also appeal
to the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation and all military alliances across the
world to seriously reassess their role in shaping the future of humanity.
A Call to Religious, Social, and Cultural
Institutions:
Religious
leaders, social organisations, universities, intellectuals, media institutions,
spiritual movements, and civil society must also rise to this historic
responsibility. Whether temples, mosques, churches, gurudwaras, monasteries,
synagogues, or spiritual missions — all must unite in spreading the message of
compassion, non-violence, and human brotherhood. Silence in times of danger
becomes participation in danger. Peace must become a people’s movement. Humanity
must reject hatred, extremism, fanaticism, and violence in every form.
As Nelson Mandela observed: “If you want to make peace with
your enemy, you have to work with your enemy.”
Message and Warning from Ahimsa
Foundation India:
On behalf
of Ahimsa Foundation India,
we issue this appeal to all world leaders, military establishments,
international institutions, and citizens of the earth:
The world is standing dangerously close to a point
from which there may be no return. Human ambition, ego, political rivalry,
economic greed, strategic control, and military arrogance must not be allowed
to destroy mankind. We respectfully urge leaders, including Donald Trump,
Vladimir Putin, Xi Jinping, Narendra Modi, Benjamin Netanyahu, Volodymyr
Zelenskyy, Kim Jong Un, and all global powers, to exercise maximum restraint
and wisdom.
Even one accidental nuclear release could trigger
unimaginable destruction across the planet. Humanity cannot afford such a
mistake. This is not merely a diplomatic issue. This is not merely a military
issue. This is the question of human survival itself. Let peace prevail over
power. Let wisdom prevail over aggression. Let humanity prevail over hatred. Because
if mankind fails to choose peace now, history may not give humanity another
opportunity.
Ahimsa Foundation warmly welcomes information, photographs, literature, articles, and other meaningful contributions for publication on this web portal: www.jainsamaj.org | ✉ CAINDIA@HOTMAIL.COM
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