What do religious leaders think
about Abu Dhabi interfaith meeting?
Pope Francis in Abu Dhabi on Feb. 4, 2019 (AFP) |
Pope Francis who is in Abu Dhabi, UAE, is addressing an
interfaith meeting, Feb. 4.
By Robin Gomes
Pope Francis Pope Francis is in the United Arab
Emirates Feb. 3-5, in what is the 27th Apostolic visit of his pontificate
outside Italy.
When he landed in Abu Dhabi Sunday night he became the first
Pope to set foot on the Arabian Peninsula.
The theme of this landmark visit is “Make me a channel of
your peace”, and this is represented in the official logo of a dove
carrying an olive branch.
This trip intends to be an urgent appeal to the region and
to the world to pursue values of peaceful coexistence and overcome prejudice
and allegiance to divisive ideologies, sects, and political parties.
An important highlight of the Pope’s first full day in the
UAE, Monday, is an interfaith meeting at Abu Dhabi’s Founder’s
Memorial in the evening.
Several faith leaders have arrived in the UAE capital for
this inter-religious meeting. Stefan Von Kempis of Vatican News caught up
with three of them to find out about what they think about it.
Bishop Camillo Ballin
One of them is Italian Bishop Camillo Ballin is the Vicar
Apostolic of the Apostolic Vicariate of Northern Arabia (AVONA), the official
Catholic Church jurisdiction in charge of Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar and Saudi
Arabia.
He told Vatican News he appreciates the interfaith meeting
because its purpose is to create better relations among people. The
Pope’s visit in an encouragement in this line in order “to create
a new mentality”.
Bishop Ballin explained that he prefers the term “fraternity”
to “tolerance ”, because fraternity speaks about equality among the
people which is not expressed by tolerance.
The Apostolic Vicar hoped the visit of Pope Francis to Abu
Dhabi will continue in the future with visits to other Gulf countries.
Bishop Munim Younan
Another participant in the Feb. 4 interfaith meeting is
Munib Younan, the Bishop Emeritus of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Jordan
and the Holy Land. Bishop Younan, who served as the president of the
Lutheran World Federation from 2010 to 2017.
He expressed his pleasure to be able to participate in the
interfaith meeting for two reasons. First of all, he said the presence of
Pope Francis and the Grand Imam of Al-Azhar with the religious leaders is very
symbolic, sending a message that the problem in this world is not Christianity
and Islam but the extremists among Jews, Christians and
Muslims.
The presence of the Pope, in itself, he said, is building
reconciliation among the various religions.
The Pope’s visit, Bishop Younan, is also highlighting the
issue of Arab Christians. Many in the world, he pointed out,
don’t actually know that Arab Christians have been in the region since the
Pentecost. As equal citizens of the Arab and Muslim world, they have been
promoting and upholding many values even today. Arab Christians are
the guarantee of building a modern civil society, respecting human
rights, freedom of religion, equal citizenship, gender justice and freedom of
expression.
“We are a balancing power in the Middle
East,” Bishop Younan said, expressing satisfaction that this is being
highlighted by the Pope’s visit and the interfaith conference.
Another point he highlighted was that their meeting was
taking place in the first week of February, which is the United Nations World
Interfaith Harmony Week, Feb. 1-7, initiated by King Abdullah II of
Jordan. Harmony with humanity, he said, is very important for the
participants in the interfaith meeting and for all in a time of populism and
racism.
He explained to Vatican News that even if the meeting were
propaganda, it gives a message that the world is calling for harmony, not
populism, racism, hatred of the other, antisemitism, “islamophobia ” or
“ christianophobia ”.
“We religious people,” Bishop Younan stressed, “have to
build harmony, justice and peace in our world, including in
Jerusalem.”
Rabbi Michael Schudrich
The Chief Rabbi of Poland, Michael Schudrich is also among
the invitees at Monday’s inter-religious conference in Abu Dhabi.
He said the fact they are together “breaks stereotypes”,
such as a Rabbi can’t be in an Arab country or a Muslim and a Jew can’t speak
to each other.
He said he comes from a country where 3 million Jews and 3
million Christians out of a population of 30 million were murdered during World
War II. Hence as a religious leader, he has an “extra
responsibility” to look out for any possibility for peace so “that kind of
horror should never happen again”. And the interfaith meeting
during UAE’s Year of Tolerance is a chance, Schudrich said.
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