First international Buddhist-Christian dialogue for nuns asserts
they can be powerful witness
Buddhist-Christian dialogue. |
Seventy
nuns from 16 countries gathered in Taiwan from October 14-18 to share ideas and
dialogue on contemplative and active life in their respective faiths.
By
Robin Gomes
The
First International Buddhist-Christian Dialogue for Nuns that
concluded last week in Taiwan pledged to foster mutual
understanding and friendship among themselves in order to witness to others and
bring hope and healing to those in need.
The October
14-18 dialogue on the theme, “Contemplative Action and Active
Contemplation: Buddhist and Christian Nuns in Dialogue,” brought together
70 nuns from Taiwan, Korea, Japan, India, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Thailand,
Singapore, Hong Kong, Cambodia, the Philippines, Brazil, Italy, Germany,
Norway, and the United States. There was also a representative from the World
Council of Churches.
The
4-day dialogue dealt with issues such as: the origin, evolution and
present-day situation of monastic religious life for women in Buddhism and
Christianity; Buddhist meditation and Christian contemplation; the service to
humanity; religious women promoting the ‘Feminine Genius’.
In
a final statement, the nuns acknowledged that the dialogue fostered mutual
understanding and friendship among them to build bridges connecting
their different spiritual paths.
They
recognized that while being faithful to their respective faith convictions they
can also learn from one another in enriching themselves and become humble
and credible witnessesto others.
The
Buddhist and Christian nuns said they can be a witness to the fact that life can
be meaningful and joyful through detachment from consumerism,
materialism, and individualism.
They
also underscored the importance of being contemplatives in the midst of action
in order to show tenderness and bring hope and healing to those who are
in need.
The
Dialogue was organized by the Vatican’s Pontifical Council for Interreligious
Dialogue (PCID), in collaboration with Fo Guang Shan Buddhist Monastery in
Taiwan, the Association of the Major Superiors of Religious Women in Taiwan and
Dialogue Interreligieux Monastique/Monastic Interreligious Dialogue (DIM·MID).
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