National Capital Area Council - 2022 Peace light ceremony

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2022 Peace light ceremony

Event Details

Scouters and their families and friends to join us and receive the 2022 Intenational Peace Light. Volunteers will be sought to participate with speaking parts, including scouts seeking to complete requirements for the Communication and Public Speaking merit badges. 

Candles will be available on site for your family to participate in the ceremony. If your family would like to take the flame with you, a candle in a glass jar or non-propane lantern may be used to transfer the light. 

The 2022 Peace Light patch, commemorating the transfer of the light, will be available for purchase ($5) while supplies last. More patches and other Peace Light merchandise may be found online. I will provide additional information about other patches of interest in the next few days.

ABOUT THE INTERNATIONAL PEACE LIGHT

 

The Peace Light, symbolic of the Light of Christ especially evident at Christmas, is meant to promote peace, harmony and unity among all people of the world regardless of race, ethnicity or creed. Many churches, Scouting, and associated community organizations use the Peace Light in Advent worship services, parish tree lighting events, and other special ceremonies. Some groups even maintain the Peace Light year-round using the flame to ignite their Sanctuary Lights, Baptismal Candles, and Votive Lamps.

 

The Peace Light from Bethlehem campaign was originally organized in 1986 by the Austrian Broadcasting Company as part of a large charitable relief mission Light into Darkness, for children in need in Austria and abroad. Since 1986, and especially after the fall of Communism in Eastern Europe in 1989, there has been a growing cooperation between Scouts in many countries allowing the light to travel throughout 30 European nations.

 

Each year in late November, a child from Austria lights a lantern from the continuously burning candle in the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem, the site of Jesus birth. The light, known as the Peace Light, stored in special explosion-proof lanterns, is then flown with a safety adviser back to Vienna, Austria, where it is shared with delegations from across Europe who distribute it with a message of Peace to their own countries for use at ecumenical services. Scouting organizations then take the light to houses of worship, hospitals, homeless shelters, nursing homes, and places of public, cultural and political importance – to anyone who appreciates the significance of the “gift”.

 

In early December, Austrian Airlines representatives transport the Peace Light from Austria to New York City’s John F. Kennedy International Airport. A distribution ceremony of about 150 adults and children gather at the airport’s Our Lady of the Skies Chapel to welcome the light of peace and kindle their own flames.

 

The light’s pilgrimage across the U.S. begins from New York City via volunteers, many of whom are Scouts and Scouters associated with the Boy Scouts of America and Girl Scouts of the USA, transferring and sharing it in their communities. Many other dedicated volunteers meet, share, and move the Light across North America, person-to-person, coast-to-coast. The Peace Light is a sign of hope. It has expanded from a small flame to a sea of lights in a few years and shines with its message to millions of people worldwide.

 

For several decades, the Scouts around the world have actively promoted global peace and harmony through sharing the Peace Light.

 

The Peace Light is often used as a Messengers of Peace project. Administered by the World Scout Bureau, Messengers of Peace is a worldwide program aiming to inspire millions of Scouts to work toward peace. In order to earn the Messengers of Peace uniform ring to be worn around the world crest, Scouts must be actively involved in planning Peace Light activities and in sharing the flame in ways that are appropriate to the Scouts age and abilities. Cubs might welcome guests to a candlelight ceremony, hand out programs and candles, and/or be part of a procession bringing the Peace Light into the gathering. Older Scouts could help in planning and implementing the program, speak or lead a song during the ceremony, or perhaps create a display about the history of the Peace Light.

 

Learn more about the history of the Peace Light in the US here: https://www.peacelightnorthamerica.org/about/history.

 

If you have additional questions, would like to be added to the email list or other related interests, please contact me, Anthony Malone at travitaly4@gmail.com. If you would like to join the NCAC International Committee, please contact Jay Eidson at ir.ncac.je@gmail.com

Additional information will be provided in the next few days. As the opportunity is now open to meet once again let's make this ceremony the biggest to date. Spread the word!

When & Where
Marriott Scout Service Center
Saturday 12-10-2022
2:00 PM ET to 3:30 PM ET Past
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