A new Saudi-backed interfaith
center will provide an opportunity for the church to promote religious
freedom for Christians and others around the world, said the head of the
Vatican's office for interreligious dialogue.
The King Abdullah Bin Abdulaziz International Center will offer "another
opportunity for open dialogue on many issues, including those related
to fundamental human rights, in particular religious freedom in all its
aspects, for everybody, for every community, everywhere," said Cardinal
Jean-Louis Tauran during the opening of the center in Vienna Nov. 26.
"The Holy See is particularly attentive to the fate of Christian
communities in countries where such a freedom is not adequately
guaranteed," said the cardinal, president of the Pontifical Council for
Interreligious Dialogue.
Cardinal Tauran joined U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, Orthodox
Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew of Constantinople and other dignitaries
in Vienna for the inauguration of the center, which is named for and
financed by the king of Saudi Arabia.
The foreign ministers of Saudi Arabia, Spain and Austria -- the center's
founding nations -- also attended. The Vatican is assisting the project
as a "founding observer."
Saudi Arabia forbids the practice of any religion except Islam, even in
private. Groups of liberal Muslims and members of the Austrian Green
Party protested the center in the days leading up to its inauguration.
Cardinal Tauran said there were high expectations that King Abdullah's
new initiative would be marked by "honesty, vision and credibility."
The center will act as a clearinghouse to gather information, new ideas
and initiatives as well as be a kind of watchdog, to verify and act on
human rights' "failures," the cardinal said, so that no one might be
"deprived of the light and the resources that religion offers for the
happiness of every human being."
In working to support people's material, moral and spiritual
aspirations, people of all faiths must strive to respect others, learn
more about others' religious traditions and find ways people's quest for
truth can be "realized in freedom and serenity," he said.
Explaining the Vatican's role in the new initiative, Jesuit Father
Federico Lombardi, the Vatican spokesman, said the center's purpose of
furthering interreligious and intercultural dialogue was a "basic and an
urgent need for the humanity of today and tomorrow."
The Vatican will use its role in the center to call for the "effective
respect of the fundamental rights of Christians who live in countries
with a Muslim majority, in order to promote authentic and integral
religious liberty," the spokesman said in a statement Nov. 23.
He said the Vatican was participating in the center "in order better to
put to use her experience and trusted expertise in the field of
interreligious dialogue." He also noted that the center's co-founding
states, Austria and Spain, "have centuries-old Christian traditions."
Rabbi David Rosen, international director of interreligious affairs for
the American Jewish Committee, said that by supporting concrete
initiatives for peace and reconciliation the center can be religion's
"constructive voice" in areas of the world where religion is manipulated
to foment conflict.
One of the main reasons peace treaties or other political initiatives
fail, he said, is they neglect "the religious dimension of the conflict"
and therefore lack "the necessary psychological and spiritual support"
of the people involved, he told the Austrian daily newspaper, Der
Standard, Nov. 25.
While acknowledging that Saudi Arabia might use the center as a
promotional "showpiece" without making real reforms at home, the rabbi
said healthy skepticism shouldn't be allowed to cut off hope.
"King Abdullah told us that (his) country is very conservative and
traditional, and that things can't be changed overnight. But if people
see us collaborating, their outlook may change," Rabbi Rosen said. "I
think the king and his (government) ministers seriously intend to
introduce change in Saudi Arabia. The center must contribute to that."