FROM BANGLADESH TO EUROPE ANGRY
WORKERS RALLY IN THE TENS OF THOUSANDS
www.csmonitor.com - In
Dhaka, Bangladesh, a raucous crowd descended on the city center with
signs and drums, chanting and waving banners demanding the death penalty
for the owner of a factory where more than 400 people died in a
building collapse last week.In Jakarta, Indonesia, some of the tens of
thousands of demonstrators marching through the city came dressed as
ants - complete with bright red outfits and antennae - to depict the
exploitation of workers. And in Greece, trains, buses, and ferries sat
vacant and hospitals nearly empty as thousands of public sector
employees walked off the job in a one-day strike.
Each
year, May 1, better known as May Day, is marked with labor rallies and
strikes around the world. And this year's holiday came at a particularly
prescient moment in many parts of the world.
From
Europe, where the bite of austerity has left many facing down
unemployment and reduced benefits, to South and Southeast Asia, a region
cluttered with precariously-built factories similar to the one that
collapsed last week in Bangladesh, demonstrators gathered to vent
outrage and demand reform. In Phnom Pehn, Cambodia, workers rallied for
higher wages and safer working conditions. In Manila, Philipines, where
labor unions are banned, workers marched to demand the right to
organize. And in Hong Kong, thousands turned out in support of striking
dock workers, calling for wages that would help close the income gap
between the country’s rich and its poor.
In
Greece, where the government recently announced that it would lay off
180,000 civil servants over the next two years a strike shut down public
transit across Athens. And in France, which saw unemployment rose
again last month, marchers carried banners reading, “Where are the real
socialists in our government?”
Ryan Lenora
Brown, correspondent from CSMonitor, explains that May 1 is a national
holiday in some 80 countries around the world, and its ties to labor
advocacy date back to 1886, when American police killed 10 protestors at
a rally for an eight-hour workday in Chicago’s Haymarket Square.
International socialist organizations and labor unions declared it a day
of commemoration and action soon after. "Ironically, however, May Day is
not celebrated in the United States. In the early 1890s, fearing the
“socialist” overtones of the holiday, President Grover Cleveland quickly
declared an alternate holiday, beginning the American tradition of
celebrating Labor Day on the first Monday of September," Miss Brown
adds. In the Bhagavad-gītā, Sri Krishna described very clearly karma,
akarma and vikarma.
WHAT DO THE VEDIC TEACHINGS TELL US?
The
living entity has to work for his livelihood because that is the law of
material nature, and if he does not act according to his prescribed
duties, he transgresses the law of nature and binds himself more and
more to the cycle of birth and death. ... Actions that free one from the
cycle of birth and death are called akarma. ... Ordinary men wish to
perform good work in order to be recognized and achieve some higher
status of life in this world or in heaven, but more advanced men want to
be free altogether from the actions and reactions of work. Intelligent
men well know that both good and bad work equally bind one to the
material miseries. Consequently they seek that work which will free them
from the reactions of both good and bad work.
Śrīla A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupāda :
Śrī Īśopaniṣad
Iso mantra 2
http://vedabase.com/en/iso
Bhaktivedanta VedaBase
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