The Five Pillars of Peace

Defining Peace

THE FIVE PILLARS OF PEACE

Peace is not the absence of conflict. It is something built.


01 — Sovereignty

Who decides Georgia’s future?

Sovereignty is not only territorial—it is psychological. A country is free when its people believe the future is theirs to determine. Freedom begins where responsibility is accepted. For Georgia, this means resisting both external pressure and internal resignation.

02 — Solidarity

Why a country cannot be built alone

Peace requires trust. Solidarity is not uniformity—it is the recognition that our fates are intertwined. Georgia’s future depends on bridging divides rather than deepening them.

03 — Factuality

Why truth matters in public life

A shared reality is the foundation of democracy. When truth collapses, so does freedom. In Georgia, where information is often contested, factuality is a civic discipline.

04 — Mobility

What freedom looks like in real opportunity

Freedom is not just choice—it is the ability to act. A peaceful Georgia is one where opportunity is not confined to a few, and where staying is a choice, not a limitation.

05 — Unpredictability

Why freedom creates possibility

Freedom introduces uncertainty—not as a threat, but as a condition for creativity. A closed society is predictable. A free one is alive with possibility.


Peace is not passive. It is built—deliberately, collectively, and continuously.

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