| Who will you meet in Great Peacemakers? What are the book’s five paths to peace? Find out below in the book’s table of contents. It lists the paths to peace, the peacemakers profiled, and the peacemakers’ chapter themes. | Acknowledgments Introduction Part One: Choosing Nonviolence | 1. | Henry David Thoreau: Living Deliberately | | 2. | Mahatma Gandhi: Nonviolent Resistance | | 3. | Martin Luther King, Jr.: Daring to Dream | | 4. | Anderson Sa: An Instrument of Change | Part Two: Living Peace | 5. | Mother Teresa: Love in Action | | 6. | Thich Nhat Hanh: Being Peace | | 7. | Colman McCarthy: Teaching Peace | | 8. | Oscar Arias: "Us" Refers to All of Humankind | Part Three: Honoring Diversity | 9. | Bruno Hussar: Interfaith Harmony | | 10. | Desmond Tutu: All Belong | | 11. | Riane Eisler: Partnership, Not Domination | | 12. | The Dalai Lama: Universal Compassion | Part Four: Valuing All Life | 13. | Henry Salt: The Creed of Kinship | | 14. | Albert Schweitzer: Reverence for Life | | 15. | Astrid Lindgren: A Voice for the Voiceless | | 16. | Jane Goodall: Realizing Our Humanity | Part Five: Caring for the Planet | 17. | Rachel Carson: The Balance of Nature | | 18. | David Suzuki: Redefining Progress | | 19. | Nader Khalili: Sustainable Community | | 20. | Wangari Maathai: Planting Seeds of Peace | Conclusion Bibliography Index Photo Credits Share the Message
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