KAICIID SG Speech: 8th Global Forum of the UNAoC
Breakout Session 4: “Many Cultures, One Humanity:
The Role and Responsibility of Religious Leaders and Faith-Based Organizations in Building Peaceful and Inclusive Societies”
UNHQ - New York - 20 November 2018
Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen,
It is my pleasure to be among so many leaders dedicated to building and sustaining peace within and across communities.
I would like to thank the UNAOC, one of KAICIID’s long-standing partners, for hosting this significant annual forum for the eight consecutive year.
We take pride in our partnership with the Alliance and our mutual commitment to interreligious and intercultural dialogue.
This year’s Alliance Global Forum theme is extremely relevant to our work at KAICIID, “Commit to Dialogue: Partnerships for Prevention and Sustaining Peace”.
Our partnerships have been the key to our success.
I would also like to take this opportunity to thank the UN for recognizing the increasingly vital role that religious actors and FBOs are playing in the world arena and in the implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
The Advisory Council to the UN Inter Agency Task Force on Religion and Development, of which I am proud to be a Co-Chair, is giving a voice to the 84% of the world’s population who have a religious belief or tradition, and is highlighting the tremendous force for good that religion represents in our world.
For those who are not familiar with KAICIID, we are an international dialogue center based in Vienna, Austria.
We are governed by a Council of Parties consisting of the Republic of Austria, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, the Kingdom of Spain and the Holy See as a Founding Observer.
Our Board of Directors is made up of nine prominent religious leaders from five major world religions – Islam, Christianity, Judaism, Hinduism, and Buddhism.
We are the first intergovernmental organization in the world to be governed by a Board of religious leaders.
Over recent years, I have personally seen a huge growth in awareness of the role religious leaders and religious communities play in conflict prevention and sustainable peace.
KAICIID has taken a leading role in highlighting the crucial importance of religious leaders, faith-based organizations and faith communities and the need for their inclusion at the policy-making level.
Let us bear in mind the following:
A few weeks ago, violence in the north of the Central African Republic forced an evacuation of international and state aid organizations working there.
In one town, the only remaining figures of authority were the priests, the pastors and the imams. For the duration of the violence, they became the only administrators, judges, safe sanctuaries, doctors, and mediators left in the town.
The goal of KAICIID would be that the Imam, the Priest and the Pastor in this town be able to support each other and to provide a living example to its citizens of how interreligious coexistence and shared citizenship are possible.
To have the tools to identify and overcome hate speech or incitement.
To have the support they need to continue their work, and share their knowledge with policy makers and international organizations.
To be equal partners in the effort to build peace in the Central African Republic.
I think we all agree that this needs to be done, but what we need to agree on is how best to realise this aim.
To answer this question, I would like to provide three examples from our work:
In conclusion, I would like to return to our Pastor, Imam and Priest in the Central African Republic who are not only at the forefront in areas of violent conflict, but also in the war against poverty, against environmental degradation, against violent extremism and in countering political extremism.
How to support them, how to empower them, and how to maximize their ability to continue with what they are already doing: these are the questions we should be asking ourselves.
I look forward to the discussion.