UN chief says crises show need for interfaith amity

VIENNA (Reuters)- The violent crises in Syria, Gaza and Mali show how important it is for different religions to work together to promote understanding rather than sow hatred, United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon said yesterday.

Addressing the opening of a new Saudi-backed interfaith centre in Vienna, he said the Syrian conflict was “taking on troubling sectarian dimensions” and “unrest (continues) between Israelis and Palestinians.”

Valuable religious monuments had been destroyed in Mali, he said, referring to the destruction of centuries-old Muslim heritage by the radical Islamist Ansar Dine movement. Religious leaders “can unite people based on tenets and precepts common to all creeds” but at times have also “stoked intolerance, supported extremism and propagated hate.”

“I fully support your vision of religion as an enabler of respect and reconciliation,” he told about 800 religious officials and activists meeting in the Austrian capital to discuss how to promote better understanding among faiths.

Named after Saudi King Abdullah, the new centre is a welcome boost for bridge-building between faiths in an era of financial austerity but has drawn criticism because Saudi Arabia enforces a strict Islamic code and bans non-Muslim religious practice.

It plans to work first on improving how religions are presented in media and schoolbooks, involving faith leaders in children’s health campaigns in poor countries and hosting religious leaders for fellowships at its Vienna headquarters.

The King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz International Centre for Interreligious and Intercultural Dialogue (KAICIID) is the latest step in what Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal called his country’s “long march” towards cautious reform at home and improved relations with faith around the world.

“Religion has been the basis for many conflicts,” he said.

Spurred into action by the September 11, 2001 attacks in the United States – in which most of the militants involved were Saudi nationals – and radical Islamist bombings in Saudi Arabia two years later, the king has brought together Sunni and Shi’ite Muslims in Mecca to discuss how to counter extremism in Islam.

He hosted an interfaith conference in 2008 but had to hold it in Madrid because the kingdom is so conservative. However, Saudi officials at the Vienna conference stressed the dialogue message was being spread back home as well.

“The aim is to promote acceptance of other cultures, moderation and tolerance,” said Fahad Sultan AlSultan, deputy head of a Saudi national dialogue effort launched in 2003. “There are problems but we have achieved some success.”

KAICIID is managed by a board with three Muslims, three Christians, a Jew, a Buddhist and a Hindu. It aims to help religions contribute to solving problems such as conflicts, prejudice and health crises rather than be misused to worsen them.