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Man completes 11-year walk around world

World walk

Jean Beliveau, a 56 year-old Canadian takes a rest in Ontario, Canada. Eleven years ago, Jean Bliveau fled before his midlife crisis and after walking 75,000km through 64 countries has finally made it back to his homeland. Picture: AP Source: AFP

A 56-YEAR-OLD Canadian man who left home after his business went bankrupt has completed an 11-year walk around the world, and told a crowd of well-wishers his new goal was to promote peace.

Jean Beliveau - who arrived on Sunday to a hero's welcome in Montreal from loved ones, MPs and supporters - said his "real mission" was to lobby Canada and other governments to create "ministries of peace."

"We are all different, and that is what is beautiful about life on Earth - our different colours, different beliefs, different political systems," he said.

"Those are all musical notes... we must create harmony from them, create a common tune," an emotional Beliveau told the crowd assembled at city hall in the old part of the city.

Beliveau left Montreal on the day of his 45th birthday - August 18, 2000 - after his small sign business went bankrupt. He decided to run around the world to try to escape the pain.

The Canadian ran all the way to Atlanta, Georgia before slowing his stride for what would become the longest uninterrupted walk around the world: 75,000 kilometres across 64 countries.

Over 11 years, he travelled across deserts and mountains. He fell in love for nine days in Mexico, wore a turban and a long beard in Sudan, ate snake in China, and was escorted by armed soldiers in the Philippines.

Upon his return on Sunday, Beliveau reunited with his mother, whom she had not seen throughout his 11 years on the road. She welcomed him in a tight embrace.

Longtime girlfriend Luce Archambault, who offered Beliveau emotional and financial support throughout his journey, and his two children from a previous marriage were also on hand for the celebration.

More than 100 supporters walked the final kilometres with Beliveau through the streets of Montreal.

Beliveau said a so-called "ministry of peace" could lead to the creation of a team that would lecture students on peace issues, as well as a Canadian peace corps.

The idea is backed by the Society to Promote Departments of Peace.

"We may never have peace but if we take one step forward, and then another, I think we can create a better world together," Beliveau said.

Archambault, who flew to join Beliveau wherever he was once a year so they could spend Christmas together, said last month: "I'm his Penelope and he is my Ulysses."

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/newscomaumostpopularworldndm/~3/zgfRWYnrNr8/story-e6frfku0-1226168961828

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