
I re-watched this time with compassion and said, respect is not confined to politeness. There are, for example: respect for their word, respect for commitments, respect for law, respect for institutions, respect for established authority, respect for the respectful deference out of respect, the caution with respect , and hoopla ...
Inwardly, I say: So the country is riddled with Simon Kimbangu of rude disrespectful because they are disrespectful? Her voice brought me back to reality: I gotta go, my mission awaits. And I cried, involuntarily: How Keeping the Promise!
His face brightened and he smiled: It's nothing but love, I see that the lesson came. He left.
Deep inside me, I remembered a book I read and talked to a guy who said to those friends and people around him that you love each other! Since then, nobody said it better. It seems he spoke of his neighbor. If I understand correctly: - He who respects the promise made by the neighborly love .- He who respects the law and others like her country .- He who respects others and institutions loves his country .- Those who practice deference .- He who loves his neighbor, who, who, who, who, with respect ... the fact that love where love each other mutual respect. What would we say all these things under the sayings of old Christmas: unaffordable wage campaign promises not kept, the desired or imposed war, the rebellions of all kinds, imprisonment without cause, strikes by doctors, the obligation parents to take unpaid support teachers, the deterioration of living standards, poorly equipped hospitals, wandering refugees, genocide, what is happening in Kivu ... A little love would be enough, apparently, any change. I
m'égosillais: Old Christmas, where is the love? I re-re-looked lovingly this time, and says: knock on the door of your heart, let him come only ... Really? I just learned that my heart had a lock that was removed. Is this the case with my Congolese brothers too?
@ + on http://www.rd-congo.info/ says Columnist of the DRC