What is the purpose of life?

What is the purpose of life? It is to become happy. Whatever country or society people live in, they all have the same deep desire: to become happy.

Yet, there are few ideals as difficult to grasp as that of happiness. In our daily life we constantly experience happiness and unhappiness, but we are still quite ignorant as to what happiness really is.A young friend of mine once spent a long time trying to work out what happiness was, particularly happiness for women. When she first thought about happiness she saw it as a matter of becoming financially secure or getting married. (The view in Japanese society then was that happiness for a woman was only to be found in marriage.) But looking at friends who were married, she realized that marriage didn’t necessarily guarantee happiness.

She saw couples who had been passionately in love suffering from discord soon after their wedding. She saw women who had married men with money or status but who fought constantly with their husbands.

Gradually, she realized that the secret of happiness lay in building a strong inner self that no trial or hardship could ruin. She saw that happiness for anyone – man or woman – does not come simply from having a formal education, from wealth or from marriage. It begins with having the strength to confront and conquer one’s own weaknesses. Only then does it become possible to lead a truly happy life and enjoy a successful marriage.

She finally told me, „Now I can say with confidence that happiness doesn’t exist in the past or in the future. It only exists within our state of life right now, here in the present, as we face the challenges of daily life.“

I agree entirely. You yourself know best whether you are feeling joy or struggling with suffering. These things are not known to other people. Even a man who has great wealth, social recognition and many awards may still be shadowed by indescribable suffering deep in his heart. On the other hand, an elderly woman who is not fortunate financially, leading a simple life alone, may feel the sun of joy and happiness rising in her heart each day.

Happiness is not a life without problems, but rather the strength to overcome the problems that come our way. There is no such thing as a problem-free life; difficulties are unavoidable. But how we experience and react to our problems depends on us. Buddhism teaches that we are each responsible for our own happiness or unhappiness. Our vitality – the amount of energy or „life-force“ we have – is in fact the single most important factor in determining whether or not we are happy.

True happiness is to be found within, in the state of our hearts. It does not exist on the far side of some distant mountains. It is within you, yourself. However much you try, you can never run away from yourself. And if you are weak, suffering will follow you wherever you go. You will never find happiness if you don’t challenge your weaknesses and change yourself from within.

Happiness is to be found in the dynamism and energy of your own life as you struggle to overcome one obstacle after another. This is why I believe that a person who is active and free from fear is truly happy.

The challenges we face in life can be compared to a tall mountain, rising before a mountain climber. For someone who has not trained properly, whose muscles and reflexes are weak and slow, every inch of the climb will be filled with terror and pain. The exact same climb, however, will be a thrilling journey for someone who is prepared, whose legs and arms have been strengthened by constant training. With each step forward and up, beautiful new views will come into sight.

My teacher used to talk about two kinds of happiness – „relative“ and „absolute“ happiness. Relative happiness is happiness that depends on things outside ourselves: friends and family, surroundings, the size of our home or family income.

This is what we feel when a desire is fulfilled, or something we have longed for is obtained. While the happiness such things bring us is certainly real, the fact is that none of this lasts forever. Things change. People change. This kind of happiness shatters easily when external conditions alter.

Relative happiness is also based on comparison with others. We may feel this kind of happiness at having a newer or bigger home than the neighbors. But that feeling turns to misery the moment they start making new additions to theirs!

Absolute happiness, on the other hand, is something we must find within. It means establishing a state of life in which we are never defeated by trials and where just being alive is a source of great joy. This persists no matter what we might be lacking, or what might happen around us. A deep sense of joy is something which can only exist in the innermost reaches of our life, and which cannot be destroyed by any external forces. It is eternal and inexhaustible.

This kind of satisfaction is to be found in consistent and repeated effort, so that we can say, „Today, again, I did my very best. Today, again, I have no regrets. Today, again, I won.“ The accumulated result of such efforts is a life of great victory.

What we should compare is not ourselves against others. We should compare who we are today against who we were yesterday, who we are today against who we will be tomorrow. While this may seem simple and obvious, true happiness is found in a life of constant advancement. And the same worries that could have made us miserable can actually be a source of growth when we approach them with courage and wisdom.

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A person with a vast heart is happy.
Such a person lives each day with a broad and embracing spirit.
A person with a strong will is happy.
Such a person can confidently enjoy life, never defeated by suffering.
A person with a profound spirit is happy.
Such a person can savor life’s depths
while creating meaning and value that will last for eternity.
A person with a pure mind is happy.
Such a person is always surrounded by refreshing breezes of joy.

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Wirtschaftsboom in Vietnam, SPIEGEL ONLINE 15.08.2010

Produzieren, wo der Pfeffer wächst

Die Mädchen tuscheln und lachen, sie sind vielleicht sechs, sieben Jahre alt. Dann geben sie sich einen Ruck: Sie fassen die Haare der deutschen Besucherin an. Blonde Haare, das haben sie noch nie gesehen.

Ha Tinh sind Ausländer Exoten. Die Stadt liegt in der gleichnamigen Provinz in der Mitte des Landes, die Region ist eine der ärmsten in Vietnam. Straßenkinder umstreunen mobile Garküchen, Büffel trotten über die Straße, vor den Toren der Stadt knattern Mopeds über unbefestigte Wege und wirbeln roten Staub auf.

Doch der Provinz Ha Tinh steht ein gigantischer Boom bevor. Denn unter dem Boden ruht ein Schatz: rund eine Milliarde Tonnen Eisenerz.

Die Region soll das größte Eisenerzabbaugebiet Südostasiens werden. Der taiwanische Stahlriese Formosa erschließt das Gebiet und siedelt Bewohner zahlreicher Dörfer um. „Es ist die Industriezone der Zukunft“, sagt Nguyen Duc Thanh. Er baut für Siemens  ein Ausbildungsprojekt an einer Berufsschule in Ha Tinh auf.

( lesen Sie weiter http://www.spiegel.de/wirtschaft/unternehmen/0,1518,711030,00.html )

Siemens Kooperation mit meiner Berufschule

Entwurf Kooperation Siemens – Berufsschule Ha Tinh – DED (Deutscher Entwicklungsdienst) PPP

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( Viet Duc School )         ( DED Vietnam )             ( Siemens Vietnam )

Siemens Kooperation in Ha Tinh mit der

Deutsch Vietnamesiche Berufsschule

Ausgangslage:

Die Stadt Hà Tinh wird sich in den nächsten Jahren zu einem Industriezentrum entwickeln, da eine Erzverarbeitungsanlage gebaut wird. Der Aufbau der Fabrik wird Zulieferer anziehen und zu einer generellen Zunahme industrieller Aktivität in der Umgebung führen.

In einem Kooperationsvorhaben zwischen DED, GTZ und KfW werden die Lehrer einer Berufsschule in Hà Tinh, sowie zehn weiterer Berufsschulen im Land weitergebildet. Des Weiteren werden die Schulen mit Material ausgestattet und die Lehrer darin geschult, ihre Studenten an den Maschinen zu trainieren.

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Interesse von Siemens:
Siemens möchte die Berufsschule in Hà Tinh zu einem Siemensstützpunkt ausbauen. Die Lehrer der Berufsschule sollen in Kooperation mit einer Hochschule in Ho Chi Minh Stadt in europäischen Standards und an Siemensprodukten qualifiziert werden.  Dazu wird der Berufsschule Lern-, Maschinen- und Programmiersoftware zur Verfügung gestellt. Auch Maschinen zur Ausbildung wie etwa Schaltungsprogrammierbare Steuerungen SPS werden ergänzend zum von der KfW gelierten Material übergeben. Dadurch erhalten zukünftig auch die Berufsschüler eine sehr hochwertige Ausbildung. Ihre guten Fachkenntnisse und ihr Anwendungswissen zu Siemensprodukten werden es Siemens erleichtern, eigene Produkte an zukünftige Arbeitgeber der Absolventen zu vertreiben.

Interesse der Berufsschule:
Die Berufsschule profitiert von einer höheren Qualifizierung der Lehrer und den zusätzlichen Materialien. Die bessere Ausbildung der Studenten wird die Berufsschule zu einem gefragten Partner von Unternehmen machen. Schließlich profitiert auch die Wirtschaft von kompetenteren Mitarbeitern und einer gesteigerten Wettbewerbsfähigkeit.

Interesse des DED:
Der DED kooperiert mit der lokalen Wirtschaft, um soziale und ökologische Aspekte in Unternehmensstrategien zu verankern. Mit unseren Mitteln für Entwicklungspartnerschaften mit der Wirtschaft/PPP ko-finanzieren wir herausragende Projekte zu gesellschaftlicher Verantwortung von Unternehmen. Darunter verstehen wir, dass sich Unternehmen ergänzend zu ihrem Kerngeschäft sichtbar für soziale und ökologische Belange im Unternehmen und im Unternehmensumfeld engagieren.
Bezüglich eines Projekts mit Siemens und der Berufsschule bieten sich Themen wie Energiesparen, Arbeitssicherheit, Erneuerbare Energien, Umweltschutz an.

Mögliche CSR-Maßnahmen als Ergänzung zum Aufbau des Siemenszentrums wären zum Beispiel:
• Ausstattung von öffentlichen Gebäuden mit Solaranlagen
• Anschluss eines Dorfes an die öffentliche Wasserversorgung
• Durchführung eines wissenschaftlichen Wettbewerbs mit Schülern einer weiterführenden Schule
• Hygieneschulung für Mitarbeiter eines Krankenhauses

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Welcome to SAVE the CHILDRENS SOUL´S

About Save the Childrens Soul`s

Save Children’s Souls is a Christian child relief organization, based in Vietnam, independent of any political or religious affiliation.

We have a needs and effects oriented approach, helping children and village communities in South East Asia in the areas of emergency, poverty and economic support.

Rather than simply giving money to villagers, we work actively and directly in partnership with communities to develop sustainable projects that raise the standard of living for the community at large.

We believe that the key to sustainable development is through adopting a bottom-up approach. The first phase of any project is the development of trust with the community, and throughout all following engagements it is the needs of the community that form the core of our work.

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Our principles

Save Children’s Souls is a politically and religiously independent German child relief organization which supports children and young people specialy in South East Asia.

Save Children’s Souls has dedicated itself to the primary purpose of performing lasting and professional support at the ground level in South East Asia.

Save Children’s Souls takes into consideration local culture and circumstances in the realization of all projects.

Save Children’s Souls does not support any projects that limit the rights and freedoms of children.

Save Children’s Souls does not directly hand over money, but works in close collaboration with local authorities.

Save Children’s Souls aims to raise the quality of life for children by improving infrastructure.

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