Christian-Muslim peace summit underway in Beirut

Beirut, where the Al-Amin Mosque has been built adjacent to Christian churches in the downtown core, is an apt setting for the peace summit. Photo: fashcool
Beirut, where the Al-Amin Mosque has been built adjacent to Christian churches in the downtown core, is an apt setting for the peace summit. Photo: fashcool
Published June 20, 2012

A three-day Christian-Muslim peace conference is underway in Beirut, with delegates citing chaotic Egyptian elections, armed conflict in Syria and tension between Israel and Iran contributing to a sense of urgency.

Ayatollah Seyyed Mohammad-Ali Taskhiri, the highest ranking clergyman among Iran’s representatives, urged the dozens of religious leaders, representing nearly all strains of Christianity and Islam, to envision “the heaven and passion of coexistence,” adding that “dialogue was born with humanity itself.” The conference opened on June 18, Episcopal News Service reports.

It is the second Christian-Muslim peace summit organized by the Episcopal Washington (D.C.) National Cathedral, former diocesan bishop John Chane and the Rev. John L. Peterson, director of the cathedral’s Center for Global Justice and Reconciliation.

The 2012 Beirut summit, themed “Building Justice and Peace in a Violent, Changing World,” was opened by former Lebanese President Amin Gemayel, a Maronite Christian leader whose brother and son were both assassinated while holding political office.

Standing in Beirut’s new Al-Amin Mosque, Gemayel called on the group not to try to “reduce differences,” but rather to find commonality through dialogue so that they could together “face the world of fundamentalism and other-ism.”

One of the Beirut summit’s principal areas of discussion is the plight of religious minorities throughout the world, with focus on how the Muslim minority is treated in the West, and how the Christian minority is treated in the East. Another theme is the importance of overcoming a culture of religious disbelief and indifference to religion in the developed world.

Said Chane: “It’s clear that once faith is either removed from public life or is challenged as a guide for compassionate care of the other through the values of kindness and goodness … then a vacuum is created. When such a vacuum occurs, fringe elements from both religions corruptly reinterpret time-honored core teachings and religious values in order to support their own personal or political needs and desires.”

Among those assembled are Anglican Communion officials known for interfaith work, including former archbishop of Canterbury George Carey; Bishop Michael Ipgrave of Woolwich, England, and former interfaith relations adviser to the Archbishops’ Council of the Church of England; and Clare Amos, inter-religious program executive of the World Council of Churches.

Also attending is Anglican Bishop in Jerusalem Suheil Dawani, leader of 30 parishes and more than 30 social service institutions throughout Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, the Palestinian Territories, and Israel.

Dawani reminded the group of the crucial importance of “strengthing the Christian presence in the Middle East and the Holy Land in particular.” Sounding the summit’s theme of interdependency, he noted that the presence of Christians in the Holy Land “will not be improved without widespread support of Christians worldwide and our Muslim and Jewish friends and neighbors.”

Young Episcopalians from the U.S. are represented by the Rev. Chloe Breyer, executive director of the Interfaith Center of New York and a well-known author, blogger, and public speaker.

Catholic representatives include Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, president of the Pontifical Council for Inter-Religious Dialogue; Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, Archbishop Emeritus of Washington, D.C.; and Fr. Paul Rouhana, Secretary General of the Middle East Council of Churches.

Rounding out this group are representatives from other Catholic denominations prevalent in the Middle East, including the dominant Maronite Church from Lebanon, the Melkites, and the Armenians.

The large Lebanese Sunni group is led by the Mufti of Tripoli & North Lebanon, Sheikh Malek Shaar. A Sunni woman from Egypt, Sanaa Aly Marei Makhlouf, is a professor at the American University of Cairo.

The conference start was “stimulating and engaging, said Carey, mentioning presentations by the Sunni Muslim and Roman Catholic delegations. Shi’ite Muslim and Anglican Communion principals, along with their delegations, made presentations on the second day.

Many of the principals who attended the much-smaller gathering two years ago praised the summit organizers for moving the second round to the Middle East. “It’s an important statement of our ongoing commitment to work toward reconciliation in a way that can make a real difference to people of the region, both Christians and Muslims,” said Amos, of the World Council of Churches.

Following the opening session, the summit received enormous press coverage on Lebanese television, radio, and print media, as well as Middle East-based cable channels Alhurra and Al Jazeera. “This,” noted Peterson, “reflects the importance of the summit in finding ways to work towards justice and peace.”

The first summit, held at Washington National Cathedral in May 2010, brought together Shi’ite clergy from other countries with Sunni Muslim, Catholic, and Protestant representatives. Over three days of meetings, the group hammered out a call to action asking “government and community leaders to promote peace and reconciliation efforts worldwide,” especially in the Holy Land.

Eileen Read is a freelance journalist based in Los Angeles.

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