Dublin’s Lord Mayor has said the city’s new Interfaith Charter is a
seed for other cities in Europe and the world to show how people of
different faiths can live and work together in a harmonious way while
practising their own religious beliefs.
Launching the first Dublin City Interfaith Charter at the Mansion
House, Cllr Brendan Carr expressed condolences on behalf of
the people of Dublin to the people of Berlin over the recent terror
attack in the German city.
Dublin’s first citizen told the assembled Christian, Muslim, Jewish,
Buddhist and Sikh representatives that it was “fitting” they were
“standing together shoulder to shoulder to ensure that such an evil act
never happens in our city”.
But he also expressed concern that racism,
xenophobia and intolerance are “creeping” into societies around the
world.
The new charter deals with issues such as religious freedom, inter-faith dialogue and the promotion of religious diversity.
The Archbishop of Dublin and Glendalough, Dr Michael Jackson, who
gave the keynote address at the Mansion House, expressed
concern for the victims of the “unspeakable tragedy in
Berlin”.
In his address, Archbishop Jackson paid tribute to Cllr Brendan Carr’s revival of the Dublin City Interfaith Forum.
“Without this structural link between the civic and the religious
worlds, our work would not be possible. We in turn hope that we offer a
few things which may be useful to the Lord Mayor as he moves forward
this agenda for peace and respect. We can provide ready access to
communities right across Dublin to whom it is often hard to reach out.
We can pledge our support in helping to connect this wonderful
initiative with the Inter-Cultural Network of European cities.”
The Archbishop said that the faith leaders present should do
everything in their power, as they move into the New Year, 2017, to get
as many people as possible – inside and outside the World Faiths – to
sign the charter.
“Creation and humanity unite us even when religion and culture
continue to divide. The Lord Mayor makes this bold gesture and gracious
statement at a time when we all look aghast at the plight of Aleppo, a
city of people – individuals and communities – who have been brutalised
almost to oblivion. Their doctrine of peaceful co-existence across
Faiths and Cultures, Cultures and Faiths has been tested to breaking
point and to a depth of degradation which history has often
retrospectively called genocide.”
In his address, Archbishop Jackson said that in so many other ways,
2016 had widened our understanding of Dublin and Ireland “without
diminishing our identity”.
“We have marked through commemoration people and events, history and
myth which have framed decisions and perspectives on what it is to live
through one hundred years of history and to live ahead for the future
and to commit together to a different society of diversity of expression
and respect for others in a changed and a changing Ireland.”
He told the representatives of the various faiths that the pressure
“is on us to share the best of who we are as neighbours who want to be
friends. The pressure is particularly on those of us who feel we have
the ground of history under our feet as local Christians of whatever
hue; until recently we have never accustomed ourselves to giving an
account of ourselves; we have simply assumed an entitlement to be and to
be here. All of us who stand with Faith as an expression of community
and of self, of belief and of culture need to work quickly to keep up
with the programme of the Charter launched today.”
Speaking about the event, the Lord Mayor described the charter as “far-seeing”.
“Dublin has always enjoyed a very open attitude to different
communities and cultures and this charter further reaffirms our
commitment to this at a time when intolerance would appear to be more
widespread among different nations,” he said.
He appealed to every faith community present at the ceremony to take
in a family from Syria and look after and support that family for a
period of two years and help them integrate into Irish society.
Warning that intolerance is “creeping in more and more around the
world”, he said it was something the Dublin Interfaith Forum had said
was not going to happen here. He pledged the signatories to the charter
would act as a guiding light for tolerance.
“This is the start of something; the start of ceasing intolerance and
hate in our city; this is the start of people starting to live together
and respecting each other and supporting each other. I firmly believe
this is putting Dublin at the forefront of trying to stop what we see in
Berlin.”
The Lord Mayor appealed to the signatories of the charter to bring
its commitments on tolerance and dialogue back to their faith
communities and embed it in them.
According to Michael O’Sullivan, Chair of the Interfaith Forum, the
new Interfaith Charter is intended to provide the platform for educating
and encouraging people of different faiths to dialogue and act together
in challenging all forms of injustice and discrimination.
Echoing recent media comments from the Minister for Integration,
David Stanton, Mr O’Sullivan said that the Interfaith Forum is
“committed to work alongside other agencies to influence and support the
integration process on many levels.”
Archbishop Jackson described the Lord Mayor’s involvement in the
Dublin City Interfaith Charter as a “proactive contribution by the First
Citizen to the life of the city and its communities in the areas of
faith and culture. I commend it to everyone as a charter of respect and
diversity.”
Sheikh Hussein Halawa, Chair of the Irish Council of Imams said, “The
most significant contribution we can make now is to help people to live
confidently with religious diversity, and to dispel fear of
differences, the fear of the ‘other’. The Interfaith Charter will enable
faith communities to develop better understanding, relationships of
deeper respect, and acceptance of each other as human beings.”