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Asian Religious Leaders Urge Religions To Teach Peace
an article by Union of Asian Catholic News
Religious leaders from 25 countries in Asia and around the
Pacific Ocean ended their five-day assembly here in Manila by outlining
concerns related to peace in the region, and actions they could pursue
in their countries.
The five-page declaration approved by the seventh assembly of
the Asian Conference of Religions for Peace (ACRP) encourages members
to visit places hit by war and disaster, and to assist in
reconciliation efforts.
It suggests national conferences establish therapeutic centers
and create other strategies to help in healing survivors of war,
torture, disaster and other traumatic events.
The assembly proposed a United Nations Decade of
Interreligious Dialogue and Cooperation and urged members of the
regional conference to call on their governments to support the
initiative at the U.N. General Assembly.
ACRP, founded in Singapore in 1976, seeks understanding among
followers of various religions in Asia, and promotes peace, justice and
human dignity through cooperation. It is the regional affiliate of the
World Conference of Religions for Peace and held assemblies every five
years from its establishment through 2006.
Of about 400 participants in the Oct. 17-21 assembly, 124 were
official delegates of principal religious communities in Asia including
Buddhists, Christians, Confucianists, Hindus, Jewish, Muslims and
Shintoists. The assembly on the theme "Peacemaking in Asia" included
sessions at both the Manila Hotel and the pontifical University of
Santo Tomas.
Workshops and discussions addressed a range of issues such as
violence, the widening rich-poor gap, hunger, gender discrimination,
migrant labor and displacement. They also touched on religious and
ethnic conflicts, terrorism, environmental abuse, globalization and the
continuing danger of nuclear weapons to the region. ACRP
secretary-general Sunggon Kim, in his address to the assembly, said
these issues remain a concern and of great importance to religious
leaders and movements. But Asia's many faiths and spiritual traditions
can offer answers, he added.
National conferences from Cambodia and Iran joined as new
members in the assembly, which also involved participants from
Australia, Bangladesh, China, India, Indonesia, Japan, North and South
Korea, Mongolia, Nepal, New Zealand, Pakistan, Philippines, Singapore,
Sri Lanka and Thailand.
The final declaration also urges members to undertake and
support peace education in schools and religious formation
institutions, and among women. It encourages members to call on their
respective governments to sign the global treaty against cluster bombs
and to further support nuclear non-proliferation and nuclear
disarmament efforts toward a nuclear-weapon-free world by 2020.
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DISCUSSION
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How can different faiths work together for understanding and harmony?
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RELIGION AND CULTURE OF PEACE
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Readers' comments are invited on this topic and the five reports to which it refers: Creating Harmony in the World: Working through Our Faiths in Dialogue; Alternate Focus: Balance in Media Coverage in Middle East; The Parliament of the World's Religions (Barcelona, Spain); Asian Religious Leaders Urge Religions To Teach Peace; and Living Faiths Together - Tool kit on inter-religious dialogue in youth work
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