Axil and Erika have finished their second video of their series “What World Peace Means.” See Axil’s Video Section below to watch Episode 2. They’ll post another video next weekend.
What World Peace Means Episode 2
Erika’s Peace Beads
What World Peace Means
Erika Joins the Campaign
Martin Luther King Jr. Peace Festival
Hi. I am Axil Kollist. I’m eleven years old and I’ve been campaigning for World Peace Before 2021 for five years. I have a sister Erika. She just turned fourteen. She has a sweet voice and I’ve always begged her to sing my song “World Peace Before 2021″ with me but she would say she was too nervous to sing in public. It looks like all my pestering finally paid off because Erika recently told me she’d give it a try. So she joined me singing “World Peace Before 2021″ in Hawaii on Martin Luther King Jr. Day and she did awesome. So, it’s really big news… I have a partner! YAY Erika! Here’s a photo of us at the Martin Luther King Jr. Peace Day.
Maui Martin Luther King Jr. Peace Festival 2012
I will be performing my song World Peace Before 2021 on Monday January 16 at the Maui Martin Luther King Jr. Peace Festival. My sister Erika has decided to help me sing the song and will be performing with me. We are scheduled to start our performance at 2pm. The event takes place at the Maui Canoe Club (Hoaloha Beach). Please come out to support us and to support the campaign for world peace. With everyone’s help we can achieve our goal of World Peace Before 2021!
Axils new Metta World Peace Lakers Jersey
Axil has been waiting to get a Metta World Peace Jersey. However, they are still not available so he ordered a ‘custom’ Lakers jersey and his sister made a few modifications. Now 11 year old Peace Activist Axil Kollist makes a bold prediction! The Lakers will win the Championship this year because of Metta World Peace’s positive energy! Have a look at Axil’s World Peace Jersey and watch as his prediction comes true.
Axil Kollist Supports The Three New Winner’s Of The Nobel Peace Prize
Here at “World Peace Before 2021″ we are very interested in all that is peace. So we were thrilled when we heard that The Nobel Peace Prize for 2011 was awarded to three women from Africa and the Arab world in acknowledgment of their nonviolent role in promoting peace, democracy and gender equality. The winners were President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf of Liberia — the first woman to be elected president in modern Africa — her compatriot, the peace activist Leymah Gbowee, and Tawakkol Karman of Yemen, a pro-democracy campaigner.
Most of the recipients in the award’s 110-year history have been men, and Friday’s decision seemed designed to give impetus to the fight for women’s rights around the world.
“We cannot achieve democracy and lasting peace in the world unless women obtain the same opportunities as men to influence developments at all levels of society,” said the citation read by Thorbjorn Jagland, a former Norwegian prime minister who heads the Oslo-based Nobel committee that chooses the winner of the $1.5 million prize.
In a subsequent interview, he described the prize as “a very important signal to women all over the world.”
Sitting inside her blue tent at the antigovernment sit-in where she has lived since late February, Ms. Karman, the Yemeni human rights activist, said “I didn’t expect it,” her eyes growing wide, a red flowered veil around her head. “It came as a total surprise.”
Ms. Karman, 32, a mother of three, took to the streets of the capital along with about 50 other university students in January, demanding the resignation of President Ali Abdullah Saleh.
“This is a victory for Arabs around the world,” she said of the prize, adding “and a victory for Arab women.”
In Liberia, Mrs. Johnson Sirleaf said that she and Ms. Gbowee accepted “this honor on behalf of the Liberian people, and the credit goes to them.”
“For we are now going into our ninth year of peace, and every Liberian has contributed to it,” she said. “We particularly give this credit to Liberian women, who have consistently led the struggle for peace, even under conditions of neglect.”
Mrs. Johnson Sirleaf is nearing the end of a heated re-election campaign, and as the world absorbed the news of her prize, her nation’s capital, Monrovia, was virtually shut down by a previously scheduled rally intended to energize the opposition before the vote on Tuesday.
Mr. Jagland said the election had not influenced the committee’s decision, calling the ballot there a “domestic consideration.” Analysts in Liberia have described the president’s re-election prospects as uncertain, though the Nobel announcement could change that. The Nobel committee’s decision underscored the gap between local perceptions of her — it is not hard to find critics of the president in Liberia — and the view from abroad.
Indeed, while Liberians widely acknowledge that peace and security have improved markedly during her tenure, Mrs. Johnson Sirleaf’s success in securing forgiveness for billions of dollars worth of Liberian debt and the change she has effected in the nation’s once brutal international image are often less appreciated in Monrovia than among outsiders. Unemployment is daunting, and the country is still mired in poverty.
But some residents took obvious pride in the decision. As the prize was announced, Bushuben Keita, a spokesman for Mrs. Johnson Sirleaf’s Unity Party, declared: “We are dancing. This is the thing that we have been saying: progress has been made in Liberia. We’ve come through 14 years of war, and we have come to sustained peace.
“This is proof that she has been doing well; there’s no cheating in this, this comes from other people. She’s doing very, very well. Her progress has been confirmed by the international community.”
In Yemen, Ms. Karman called the prize “the victory of our peaceful revolution. I am so happy, and I give this award to all of the youth and all of the women across the Arab world, in Egypt, in Tunisia.”
“We cannot build our country or any country in the world without peace,” she said.
In an op-ed piece published in The New York Times on June 18, Ms. Karman, whose first name in Arabic has been spelled as both Tawakkol and Tawakul, characterized President Saleh’s regime as a corrupt failure, and she urged the United States to quit supporting him even though he has portrayed himself as indispensable to the American effort to eliminate Al Qaeda operatives in Yemen. American officials have been pressing Mr. Saleh to relinquish power in a peaceful transition.
In Washington, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, one of the world’s most powerful women, praised the award recipients. “The unflinching courage, strength and leadership of these women to build peace, advance reconciliation and defend the rights of fellow citizens in their own countries provide inspiration for women’s rights and human progress everywhere,” Mrs. Clinton said in a statement.
In Egypt, several activists who had been rumored to be in contention for the prize for their roles in the Egyptian revolution — the Google executive Wael Ghonim, the online organizer Esraa Abdel Fatah and the members of the April 6 Youth Movement — expressed pride that a young Arab had won the Nobel.
They declared that the true prize they sought was the fruition of the Egyptian revolution in the development of democracy in Egypt and the region. “We will work hard even if we didn’t get the Nobel prize,” Waleed Rashed, a spokesman for the April 6 group, said in an Internet posting.
More than 250 people were nominated for the prize this year, and there had been speculation that the committee would reward bloggers or other activists from the Middle East who used social networking sites and other Internet platforms as they challenged entrenched dictatorships, particularly in Tunisia and Egypt.
But if the committee had singled out the Arab Spring, it could have courted criticism that, far from rewarding efforts toward peace, it had chosen a phenomenon whose final outcome in Egypt and Tunisia is far from clear, and which has provoked bloodletting and strife in Libya, Syria, Yemen and Bahrain.
Mr. Jagland said the 2011 prize recognized those “who were there long before the world’s media was there reporting.”
In the past the prize has not infrequently been split among several recipients, including the 1994 prize shared by the Palestinian Yasser Arafat and the Israelis Shimon Peres and Yitzhak Rabin; the 1978 award to Anwar Sadat of Egypt and Menachem Begin of Israel; and the 1973 prize to Henry A. Kissinger of the United States and Le Duc Tho of North Vietnam.
Axil’s dream is one day to be proudly added to this list of visionaries.
World Peace Is Causing A Stir Thanks NBA Player Ron Artest.
Lakers star Ron William Artest Jr., changed his name, and is now officially known as Metta World Peace.
Of course “World Peace” here at “World Peace Before 2021″ is our favorite topic. We are jazzed that such an influential character has decided to use his fame to get people thinking about world peace.
So what does the “Metta” stand for?
In Buddhist tradition, “Metta” means loving-kindness and friendliness toward others.
“Ron Artest, (World Peace) has apparently contemplated the name change for years and always knew that he wanted his last name to be World Peace but took many years of research and soul searching to find a first name that was both personally meaningful and inspirational,” said Courtney Barnes, World Peace’s publicist.
World Peace first announced he was planning to change his name earlier this summer. Seeing “World Peace” written across his jersey will definitely provoke thousands of fans contemplate what world peace means to them.
The NBA star is better known for his skills on the court. Yet his bigger work is taking place off the courts.
He recently raffled off his 2010 NBA Championship ring and raised more than $650,000. The money will be donated to nonprofits “that provide no- or low-cost mental health therapist and mental health services to those who wouldn’t otherwise have access,” according to World Peace’s website.
There has never been a better time on this planet to visualize and plan for world peace. If you do not have World Peace Before 2021 bumper sticker click here.
Ben & Jerry’s Imagine Peace, Axil Kollist Approves.

Here on Maui we love our ice cream, and now we have a new flavor that is quite delicious both for our taste buds and our vision of world peace before 2021!
All the world needs is peace, love and ice cream — at least according to Ben & Jerry’s.
To spotlight the ice cream enterprise’s newest creation, “Imagine Whirled Peace,” a swirl of sweet cream-flavored ice cream, toffee chips and fudge peace signs.
Visitors can upload photos and small text messages illustrating their thoughts and emotions on world peace. For a treat as sweet and light as ice cream, many of the messages are deeper than a sugary treat. Carl R. from Pittsburgh declared, “Peace will only happen when all traces of hate, racism, and bigotry disappear.”
Steve H. from Falls Church, Va. advised, “Give one person a break today, and maybe someone will give you one tomorrow!”
Anita I. from Chattanooga, Tenn. said simply, “Hate is very ugly.”
Another reason we at “World Peace Before 2021″ are loving this ice cream is that this particular flavor is also associated with rock and roll, and another peace activist of his time, the much loved John Lennon.
Mmmmm rock and roll and ice cream.
Although this is just another clever marketing ploy by the ice cream giant, it is still a great way to reach younger audiences and getting people thinking about peace.
Of course this is what Axil’s goal is dedicated to. Getting people to visualize World Peace Before 2021.
Get your free bumper sticker here.
Peace Out









