Saudi-founded religious center participates in world peace summit

  • 5/1/2019
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VIENNA: An international organization co-founded by Saudi Arabia to promote dialogue between faiths has taken part in a high-profile world peace summit. Faisal bin Muammar, secretary-general of the King Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz International Center for Interreligious and Intercultural Dialogue (KAICIID), addressed the opening of the three-day conference in Vienna. Organized by the UN Office on Genocide Prevention and the International Association for the Defense of Religious Freedom, the second annual session of the summit was titled “religion, security and peace: building bridges, promoting inclusiveness and combating hate speech to strengthen the protection of religious minorities, refugees and migrants.” Bin Muammar began his speech by expressing his deep sorrow at recent terrorist attacks in Sri Lanka and Christchurch, New Zealand. He said the incidents where a dangerous indicator that religious minorities were being increasingly targeted for their beliefs and noted that the world was experiencing a significant growth in attacks and subversive acts targeting places of worship and refugee centers. The secretary-general pointed to the important work of KAICIID as an interreligious and multicultural intergovernmental organization established in 2012 by Saudi Arabia, Austria and Spain, as well as the Vatican as a founding member and observer. He said the center acted as a model of sincere commitment to preserving and respecting religious and cultural diversity and its board of directors consisted of nine representatives from the five major religions of the world, Muslims, Christians, Jews, Buddhists and Hindus. Bin Muammar emphasized efforts to further build interfaith dialogue in Nigeria, Myanmar, the Central African Republic and the Arab region. He highlighted the center’s support for the Islamic and Jewish Council of Europe, which brought together representatives of Muslim and Jewish communities and said that in building bridges between these two communities they were able to face common challenges. He also called for mechanisms to enable individuals, leaders and religious institutions to communicate with policymakers and provide them with realistic solutions to tackle hatred and violence against minorities and promote a dialogue aimed at bringing about peaceful coexistence.

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