The Message of the
Sunflowers:
A Magic Symbol of Peace by Georgianna Moore, March 2002
Dedicated to
the Children of the World Who Will Sow the Sunflower Seeds of
Peace
Once upon a time the earth was even more beautiful
than it is today. The water was pure and deep, reflecting within
itself the sunlight which gave life to all the creatures beneath
the waves.
The earth was green with many kinds of trees and
plants. These gave food and shelter to the birds, the animals,
and to all mankind. At night the air was so clear that the starlight
gave a glow almost as bright as the moon.
The people of the earth lived close to nature.
They understood it and honored it and never took more than what
they needed from it. The people lived in peace so they prospered
and began to build many nations all around the world according
to nature's climate.
But one day, a terrible thing happened. A strange
spirit of greed entered the hearts of mankind. People began to
be jealous of one another, and they were not satisfied will all
the good things they already had. The nations wanted more and
more of everything: more land, more water, more resources. They
squeezed precious minerals from the earth to build terrible weapons
to defend their nations from other greedier nations. They killed
one another. They polluted the air and the water with poisons.
Nature began to die. This is called war. War is ugly. It destroys
love and hope and peace.
Then one day a magical thing occurred. The birds
of the air, the animals of the land, and the creatures beneath
the waters came to an agreement: if they were to survive, something
would have to be done to stop these wars. Only through peace could
their world survive.
"We cannot speak the human language,"
they declared, "and mankind can no longer understand ours.
We must find among us a symbol of peace so brilliant that all
who see it will stop and remember that peace and sharing is beautiful."
"I am what you need," said a golden sunflower.
"I am tall and bright. My leaves are food for the animals,
my yellow petals can turn plain cloth to gold, my seeds are many
and are used for food by all living beings. Yet, the seeds I drop
upon the ground can take root and I will grow again and again.
I can be your symbol of peace."
All nature rejoiced, and it was decided that the
birds would each take one sunflower seed and that they would fly
over every nation and plant the seed in the earth as a gift. The
seeds took root and grew, and the sunflowers multiplied.
Wherever the sunflowers grew, there seemed to be
a special golden glow in the air. The people could not ignore
such a magical sight.
Soon they began to understand the message of the
sunflowers so they decided to destroy all of their terrible weapons
and to put an end to the greed and to the fear of war. They chose
the sunflower as a symbol of peace and new life for all the world
to recognize and understand.
A ceremony was celebrated by planting a whole field
of sunflowers. Artists painted pictures of the sunflowers, writers
wrote about them, and the people of the world were asked to plant
more sunflowers seeds as a symbol of remembrance.
All nature rejoiced once more as the golden sunflowers
stood tall with their faces turned eastward to the rising sun,
then following the sun until the setting in the west.
They gave their goodness to the world so that everyone
who sees a sunflower will know that the golden light of peace
is beautiful.
Sunflowers have become the symbol of a world free
of nuclear weapons. After Ukraine gave up its last nuclear warhead,
the Defense Ministers of the US, Russia and Ukraine met on a former
Ukrainian missile base, June 4, 1996. They celebrated by scattering
sunflower seeds and planting sunflowers. Former US Secretary of
Defense William Perry said, "Sunflowers instead of missiles
in the soil will ensure peace for future generations."