Plead for Dignity 28-11-2024 till 28-04-2025

           Till 28-06-2025 till 28-06-2032 Yeahhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!

Instead of the World Clock being1 minute to twelve, we made it through THE SHIFT and Gained 5 minutes ahead!!! Gained at least 7 years ahead from G.!!!

World Clock moved to 6 minutes after 12 – 00:)06

Time: 21:18 StarDate: 20/06/2025

Location: Rolde, Hunebed 17-18 Drenthe ***

           

Dear Mister President, 

I hope this message finds you well. I found myself reaching out with a heartfelt plea for your support in advocating justice and dignity for communities that have long endured systematic injustice. Not as a political figure, but as a fellow human being with the power to create meaningful change. I’ve addressed this letter to the Prime Minister of the Netherlands, as well as the President of the United States of America in November 2024, just before Christmas. In this letter I specifically asked for the release of Mr. Leonard Peltier, since he was imprisoned for 50 years of his life, in the case of Wounded Knee. At 79 years of age he could finally return to his family, being the Spiritual Father of the American Indian Movement (AiM). I can’t begin to describe my gratitude to President Biden, who released Leonard Peltier without further notice, February 18, 2025. 

Today, June 2025, I would like to recall the rest of my letter, concerning two more indigenous groups : 1. The Tibetan People, represented by the last Dalai Lama in exile and 2. The Polynesian People of Ambon, specifically those who are living in Holland, as children of the former Royal Netherlands-Indonesian Army (KNIL). In Holland we refer to them as either Ambonese or Moluccan People. These are examples of similar stories of long endured slavery and colonization, endless wars and ongoing poverty. But then again, all our stories are interconnected histories, especially since our shared history over the last 300 years, worldwide. 

Although each story is unique, they all share a common thread of resilience and the enduring need for acknowledgment, restoration, and education. As we all look for Dignity and Social Inclusion, I feel your organization’s voice and influence in matters of Advocacy for Human Rights, are invaluable. I humbly ask for your guidance and cooperation in sharing this letter. Whether by forwarding it to the intended recipients, providing advice on how best to proceed as citizens, or endorsing its contents, your support would mean the world to me.

Please find the letter attached for your review. Thank you for considering this request and for the vital work you do in championing justice and dignity for all of us.

Signed, 

Letter to the President

Today, I ask for your attention of three intertwined stories of resilience and injustice—stories that are not only about the past, but most of all about the hope we carry for the future. These are the stories of the American Indians in Northern America, the stories of Ambonese people from Indonesia, living in Holland, as wel as on the Mollucan Islands, and the story of the Last Dalai Lama, and Tibetan people, living in exile and oppression since China occupied Tibet. 

Although these stories might not look similar or even disconnected from each other, they all speak to a common truth: the scars of systemic injustice remain unhealed, and the pain continues to be felt across generations and are felt worldwide! But in the face of this pain, there is also strength, resilience, and the potential for redemption—not just for separated individuals, but for nations of all kinds of peoples. At least, I strongly believe that restoring the honor of all indigenous people, following these two stories, could set major examples for other people in giving them the courage, the patience and trust to look forward to a better tomorrow. 

The Ambonese soldiers who served the KNIL with loyalty and courage, were promised dignity and a rightful return to their homeland. Instead, they were stranded in a foreign land, left to endure generations of neglect. Their descendants continue to hope for recognition and restoration, not as victims but as proud bearers of a legacy of service and sacrifice. Their Ancestors remain a symbol of the long struggle for Justice: A struggle that calls for truth, acknowledgment, and the courage to choose compassion over pride. These stories are not about guilt or blame. They are about responsibility—the kind that comes with leadership and the chance to inspire something greater than ourselves. Justice is not about force: it is about forgiveness, balance, and the dignity of all people. It is about ensuring that our children and grandchildren inherit a world built on fairness and understanding, not division and pain.

The Story of the Last Dalai Lama living in exile, seems to be long forgotten, since no-one seemed to be able to address the current and former President of China, while everyone could agree on the genocide and injustice being done in the past to the monks and the rest of the people of Tibet. Since the Dalai Lama is still able to forgive, while Tibetan People were sacrificed and since His Holiness has sacrificed his entire life, fleeing from His Holy Temple on the Himalaya, in order to translate his message of ‘being kind to each other’, to the other half of the ‘western’ world. Since His Holiness tells us that ‘human kind is kind by nature’ and to ‘believe as a child, in wonder and mindfulness, in joy and unconditional love’, it is my utmost wish to see Dalai Lama returning to Tibet, where he belongs. Only then, He might be able to select a newborn Dalai Lama, as for all the newborn children and future generations to come. Needless to say, but saying it anyway: this would not just bee a blessing for ‘the children’ in Tibet.

I strongly believe that every Mr. President is willing to negotiate about the above, since we are all depending on each other, if ‘only’ for a flourishing economy and welfare for Your ‘humble servants’. If we could see beyond walls and borders, find more than one way directions, maybe more than two options. Maybe we could meet each other halfway, somewhere in the middle, maybe in some 3Dimensional way. Maybe we shouldn’t always have to go from ‘East to the West, from North to the South, to Home in the North, is the best’. Maybe we don’t always have to go clockwise, all around the world.

I would like to ask you to consider the following actions:

1. Acknowledgment: Officially recognize the sacrifices and injustices faced by these communities, honoring their contributions and their resilience.

2. Restoration: Take meaningful steps to restore people’s dignity through reparations, symbolic acts of honor, and pathways to healing.

3. Education: Ensure that their stories are taught to future generations—not as a source of division, but as lessons in courage, unity, and the pursuit of justice.

Releasing Leonard Peltier, is restoring his honor and his reputation and restoring his plead to his ancestors and children. In a world where division often prevails, your positive actions could send a message of hope—not just to these communities, but to all who seek a better, fairer future.

“As we approach Christmas, December 25, taking the bridge to the New Year, 2025, it is impossible for me not to think of those who cannot celebrate in peace, because their wounds and sacrifices remain unacknowledged….” “As we are celebrating Easter now in Holland, this April 20, 2025, I know we are still far away from World Peace and facing more wars to come, barely makes me go through yet another day in “peace and harmony”, let alone thinking about or feeling what others have to face…”

To all who are still breathing today June 21, 2025 The First day of Summerrr pfff see Summer Equinoxxx : ) I would like to suggest a term used by the Ambonese people: Istirahat, you can translate as in PAUSE, but it is so much more than just a word. In war or in politics it could mean so much more then merely putting down your weapons, it means : taking time to reflect, before you response. It means you don’t always have to react, to every action. It means, you do not have to choose between two sides, there is always a third possibility, maybe more. It means taking a break to rest, to take a pause: take some time to think things over or to simply reflect and relax. It means pressing the reset button on your modem. This is necessary for the time and space that is needed for healing our collective trauma and wounds, time and space needed for the earth, the air, the waters and resources to restore and to heal.

Thanks to ongoing technology as Art Official Intelligence, where less and less people have to work, I would like to suggest to give everyone still living today, an equal amount of basic income, as in 2000 Euro’s a month. This could be the same for single persons as for single parents, as for families, where one is head of the family.

Everyone could stay and live in the house they are living in, or what is left of it, continue to stay on their little peace of land, their little piece of heaven, they have been came to know as the place they call home, or the place where one feels safe and best, for free. The same goes for all ready installed water and energy resources. For those who would like to travel in our lovely paradise on earth, there should be no borders, nor restrictions. For those who are left behind, all alone, sick and old there should be a circle of friends naturally looking after each other, before any special help is needed. The world should be a safe haven for all.

Thank you for your time and your willingness to consider this plea. Obvious, the world is tired of waiting and watching and we are counting on you, or whomever this may concern, 

Sincerely,