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Why people say things/places are wonderful but MAN...? After-all Man made them 'WON !"'s.....

#### $ere is my list of %O& WON !"' of the world... (. )esus *hrist. Not because he is belie+ed as ,od or 'on of ,od but for his unconditional lo+e of Man-ind as a human being. )esus taught his followers the golden rule ./do unto others as you would ha+e them do to you012 to lo+e e+en their enemies and oppressors ./turn the other chee-012 and to shun +iolence ./those that li+e by the sword die by the sword01. 3. Ab4 al-56sim Muammad ibn. Not as a prophet or 7ounder of 8slam or *ause of 5uran but for his beliefs2 the high moral character2 as leader2 and the greatness of his ultimate achie+ement. %he man who re9ected religious pluralism and despised the traditional &agan religions and stated '%here is one ,od' and ',od has no form2 $e's :niform'. 8n the time of the ancient Arabs2 women were treated li-e second class citi;ens and only seen as good for one thing. Mohammed ga+e his women rights2 told them to co+er up their assets because some men were easily aroused and resorted to rape and +iolence2 rather than women be public property he told men to marry them2 yes e+en if more than one wife at-least they were someones respect and not a bit on the side whom other men can mistreat too. %he man who called for )ihad meaning fight for your right not to terrori;e others# <. ,outham =hudda. Again not as a ,od2 but for setting a path for man-ind to attain eternal bliss. A man who was simple2 de+out2 lonely2 battling for light2 a +i+id human personality2 but not a myth. =eneath a mass of miraculous fable 8 feel that there also was a man. $e ga+e a message to man-ind uni+ersal in its character. Many of our best modern ideas are in closest harmony with it. All the miseries and discontents of life are due2 he taught2 to selfishness. 'elfishness ta-es three forms ? one2 the desire to satisfy the senses> second2 the cra+ing for immortality> and the third the desire for prosperity and worldliness. =efore a man can become serene he must cease to li+e for his senses or himself. ?A -ing in beggar's clothing> it's he whose sanctity is great among men.? @. Mother %eresa 7or her thirsting lo+e for the humanity specially poorest of poor. %he ser+ices she rendered to human-ind is 8N*OM&A"A=A! Mother treated the world 'one' family. 7or mother2 All humans are 'ON!'..%he ,lobe is 'ON!'. 'he said ' 8 belong to this World' 'he said /,od still lo+es the world and $e sends you and me to be $is lo+e and $is compassion to the poor.0 'he was a soul filled with the light of *hrist2 on fire with lo+e for $im and burning with one desireB /to Cuench $is thirst for lo+e and for souls.0 D. Mahatma ,andhi %he only man who united entire 8ndia. %he man who taught entire nation how to '7ight'. %he only man who put entire nation on one OA%$. %he man who had nothing but a peace of cloth has billions of followers. %he man who's 9ust armored with %":%$ and Non-E8OA!N*! conCuered almighty =ritish !mpire.

What made millions of people stepped bac- and obeyed his words? $ow did he ma-e that influence on masses?... &eople distracted by his uniCue +alues. &eople admired him. $e bac-ed the suppressed and oppressed and led them from the front. $e's 9ust a great humanist2 honest2 dedicated2 determined and self-disciplined. &romoted Eegetarianism and $umanism. F. Asho-a the ,reat 7or repelling by the number of deaths that he witnessed and the decision to re9ect +iolence for the rest of his life2 embracing Eedic =uddhism and +egetarianism. Asho-a's greatest accomplishment was his non-+iolent propagation of the =uddhist 7aith across Asia2 and e+en into !urope and Africa. G. r. =.". Ambed-ar 7or his ':ntouchable *aste' struggle to uplift the millions of crushed people both socially and economically. $e made the dream ''ocial )ustice' real. %he constitution designed by him made 8ndians real 8ndependent. H. 'achin %endul-ar. -My !ighth Wonder efinitely not for his numerous unbeatable records and unbelie+able achie+ements in the World of *ric-et but for his down to earth attitude and great characteristic +alues. %he passion and dedication he's been showing towards his profession remain as an eIample for any achie+er. $is submissi+e nature2 commitment2 disciplinal life style e+en after reached a stage where nothing left to conCuer are admiring. J. Olympe de ,ouges %he World is Man's. 8ts up to women themsel+es to demand that society treat them as eCuals and it is twentieth century that they began to do so en masse. =ut before this time2 there was an early pioneer of the women's mo+ement named Olympe de ,ouges. Olympe de ,ouges was a political acti+ist of the 7rench "e+olution and one of the first feminists in history. 'he was an outspo-en ad+ocate for impro+ing the condition of sla+es in the colonies. %oday she is perhaps best -nown as an early feminist who demanded that 7rench women be gi+en the same rights as 7rench men. 8n her eclaration of the "ights of Woman and the 7emale *iti;en .(GJ(12 she challenged the practice of male authority and the notion of male-female ineCuality. (K. Nelson Mandela 7or his Anti-apartheid acti+ity in 'outh Africa. $e is -nown for greatness and humility. $e is -nown as 'outh Africa's first blac- president after spending 3G years of his life as a political prisoner of the brutal white apartheid go+ernment. %his is my list of WON !"s as 8 admire their greatest human Cualities and +alues. &rabhu %e9a

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