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February 1, 2002/19 Shevat 5762, Vol. 54, No. 20

Interfaith meetings have new importance

RUTH E. GRUBER
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
ASSISI, Italy - Events like the recent interfaith peace day organized by the Vatican - and the interfaith programming that will accompany the World Economic Forum this week in New York - are increasingly important in a world threatened by religious extremism, leading rabbis say.

"After Sept. 11, it is more important than ever that religion be seen as potentially part of the solution rather than the problem," said David Rosen, the American Jewish Committee's international director for interreligious affairs.

Rosen was one of about 200 rabbis, imams, priests and patriarchs from a dozen world faiths who converged Jan. 24 on Assisi, the central Italian town where St. Francis was born, for a "Day of Prayer for Peace in the World."

He also will attend religious programming alongside the World Economic Forum, which will be held later this week in New York instead of its customary location in Davos, Switzerland.

The participants in Assisi were responding to an urgent invitation from Pope John Paul II in the wake of the Sept. 11 terror attacks on New York and Washington and the ensuing war in Afghanistan.

The aim was to hammer home the message that religion must never be used as an excuse for violence, war or terrorism.

Rabbi Arthur Schneier of the Appeal of Conscience Foundation said it was important that this message was sent out by representatives of so many different faiths - not just Christianity, Judaism and Islam, but also Buddhism, Shintoism and other Asian and African religious.

Participants concluded their day of prayer, reflection and meditation with a joint declaration proclaiming a "firm conviction that violence and terrorism are incompatible with the authentic spirit of religion."

The meeting scheduled for this week signals a rare meeting involving Israeli rabbis and clerics from Saudi Arabia and Iran, Rosen said.

Along with the archbishop of Canterbury, George Carey, and Desmond Tutu, the former archbishop of Capetown, Prince Turki Al-Saud from the Saudi royal family and Ayatollah Mohajerani, director of the International Center for Islamic Civilization in Iran, are slated to join a dialogue with Rabbi Norman Lamm, president of Yeshiva University, and Rabbi Yisrael Meir Lau, one of Israel's chief rabbis.

JTA Staff Writer Rachel Pomerance in New York contributed to this report.


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