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Adoption of B P Marg and L M Road, Dahisar a meeting was conducted on 17092023, total attendence was 18.
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Letter to Asst Municipal Commissioner for repair of L.T.Road, Dahisar West on 01092023
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Humanist Centre Malad submitted a memorandum to Ward Officer on 31082023 for construction of a speed breaker on Sunder Nagar road
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BEST issue which we had taken up, still unresolved, hence the memorandum of signatures was submitted to local MLA Mrs Manisha Chaudhari
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Humanist neighbourhood newsletter, 98th issue, 10000 copies published, distributed in Dahisar and Borivali, cost covered through advertisements
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About Me
The Humanist Movement are people all over the world, who participate in the proposals of New Humanism, also known as Universal Humanism. These proposals in their broadest sense, can be found shaped in the Document of the Humanist Movement.
This current of thought that is presented in the works of Silo and those of the diverse authors who are inspired by it, also implies a sentiment and a way of living. Taking shape in multiple fields of human endeavour, giving rise to diverse organisms and action fronts. All of them applied to their specific fields of activity with a common aim: To Humanize the Earth. In themselves they have in common the methodology of Active Non-Violence and the proposal of Personal Change as a function of social transformation.
The Humanist Movement was born on the 4th of May 1969 with a public address by its founder, Silo, known as Healing of Suffering, in a mountainous outpost in The Andes, called Punta de Vacas, close to the border of Argentina and Chile.
The HM is not an institution, even though it gives rise to numerous groups and organisations.
The organisms that have emerged from the HM until now are: The Humanist Party, The Community for Human Development, Convergence of Cultures, World Without Wars and Without Violence, and World Centre for Humanist Studies.
Although these organisms have specific organizational forms that allow them to carry out their activities, the HM itself has no organisation and constitutes an ambit of convergence and interchange for Humanists all over the world.
The activities developed by members of the HM will depend on their free initiative.
Among reference materials of the HM are:
-Document of the Humanist Movement
-Manual of Personal Development for Members of the Humanist Movement (Centre of Studies, Punta de Vacas Park, 2009)
-Collected Works, Silo Volumes I and II
-Psychology Notes
-Humanism (extract of audio-visual production “Silo’s Commentaries” 2008)