Peace isn’t distance; it’s spaciousness.
Peace isn’t silence; not the stillness after a shout fades from the empty air.
It is the breath that returns,
steady and alive,
when the heart remembers it is safe to beat,
without panic or retreat.
Sanskrit — Śānti (शान्ति)
Means tranquility, inner stillness, pacification of disturbance.
In Hindu and Buddhist chants, “Om Shanti Shanti Shanti” — peace in body, speech, and mind.
*Peace as stilling the ripples so truth can reflect clearly.
Hebrew — Shalom (שָׁלוֹם)
Meaning wholeness, completeness, harmony.
Not just “no conflict,” but everything in its right place; nothing missing, nothing broken.
Used for both hello and goodbye, as if to wish someone wholeness as they arrive and as they leave.
*Peace is integration, all parts fitting together.
Spanish — Paz
From Latin pax, same root as peace — but in Spanish, paz carries warmth and tenderness, a word spoken softly, like an exhale.
Used in greetings (ve en paz — go in peace) and blessings (paz y bien — peace and goodness).
In poetry and prayer, it evokes both outer stillness and inner gentleness — the quiet that follows forgiveness.
*Peace as gentleness — not the end of noise, but the presence of kindness in the air.
Arabic — Salaam
Safety, security, and well-being.
In Islamic thought, “Dar as-Salaam” (the abode of peace) means a state where divine order and justice prevail.
*Peace isn’t just personal; it’s rightness between people and with the world.
Japanese — Heiwa (平和)
Hei (flat, even) + wa (harmony, gentle blending).
Suggests balanced alignment — surfaces leveled (like water), forces cooperating.
Commonly used both for societal peace and personal composure.
*Peace is equilibrium — tension smoothed into coexistence.
Chinese — Hépíng (和平)
He (harmony) + ping (level, calm).
Implies mutual respect, balanced exchange, non-domination.
*Peace is symmetry — not one side winning, but both staying upright.
Latin — Pax
Root of pacify, pact.
Tied to agreement, covenant, or reconciliation.
The Pax Romana was “peace through structure” — order enforced to stop chaos.
*Peace as agreement and order, sometimes at a cost.
Greek — Eirēnē (Εἰρήνη)
Root of the English word irenic.
In classical use, meant harmony after conflict — a restored state, not a passive one.
The goddess Eirene carried a cornucopia and infant — symbols of prosperity and renewal.
*Peace as fruitfulness — what grows once struggle stops.