By Paulo Coelho
A Warrior of Light often loses heart.
(Manual of the Warrior of Light)
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By Paulo Coelho
A Warrior of Light often loses heart.
(Manual of the Warrior of Light)
Welcome to Share with Friends - Free Texts for a Free Internet
When and where the duty of an writer finishes?
Nobody is an island, as John Donne said once. By understanding that I have to fight for my rights, I also understood that this includes fighting for social justice. Since I was young, I had the romantic idea of giving people around me a chance.
For a period of my life, I was too busy, fighting for my own chance. Then, for another period, I could see – In my case - the light of the end of the tunnel, but I did not have money to help the others to fight for their dreams. In 1995 I had enough money to start a project, so I choose to:
a] support the children, the future of my country, giving them the same opportunity that I had as for education and love
b] support people who does not have enough money to live, so they only survive.
Today I invest up to 300.000 USDollars a year in these two projects. I could invest more, but there is a problem of physical space: we work in a “favela” ( a shanty town ) close to my apt., in five different houses, taking care of 310 children. We need three more houses to take care of another 200, and, although I have money to expand the project, there are no places to rent or sell in this area, so we are waiting the first opportunity to do it. I also use, as much as I can, my “influence” to get things from the govt., like credits to new projects developed by these people, basic sanitary needs, etc.
However, I only contribute with money and some sporadic visits to the places. The anonymous heroes and heroines, who are there all day long, working hard, are the ones who deserve the honors. Without them, my money would be useless.
DAVOS, January 25 (RIA Novosti) - Famous Brazilian writer Paulo Coelho said on Friday the World Economic Forum in the Swiss resort town of Davos was more about talking than predicting.
Political and business leaders from more than 80 countries started annual talks in the Swiss Alps on Wednesday amid fears that U.S. economic problems could spark a global recession.
A regular at the Davos, Coelho, 60, described it as a "neutral forum where you can talk openly about any important issue without being bound by protocol."
"Nostradamus was even more accurate than economists today. Nobody knows. They are here to talk, though nobody really can predict what will happen in six months from now," the Brazilian author said.
Coelho praised the forum’s founder, Professor Klaus Schwab, for adapting the forum to the moving world.
Professor Klaus Schwab, executive chairman of the World Economic Forum, set up the forum in 1971, which is now "a powerful intellectual group" and one of the world’s largest annual political and business summits.
Sharing his impressions of Russia, where the writer recently travelled from Moscow to Vladivostok in the country’s Far East, Coelho said, "Russia has recuperated its entity now,…and of course this may be considered as a threat, but who thinks like this is so stupid."
Asked about his artistic plans, Coelho said he was not currently writing anything and was just planning "to stay alive."
Coelho’s new book Brida will be published in Russia in March 2008.
From : en.rian.ru