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Conference on A Common Word and Future Muslim-Christian Engagement
University of Cambridge, England Sunday 12 October
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Having flown from Muenster, Germany, in response to a most appreciated invitation from His Grace, Archbishop Rowan Williams of Canterbury, His Beatitude went directly to Emmanuel College, University of Cambridge, to attend the Conference on A Common Word and Future Muslim-Christian Engagement, which was held from 12 to 15 October 2008AD/1429AH. Patriarch Gregorios was one of a number of leading Christian and Islamic scholars to address the distinguished assembly. His Grace had convened the conference in partnership with the Cambridge Inter-Faith Programme and the Royal Academy of Al Al-Bayt Institute (Jordan). Both Lambeth Palace and the Colleges and University of Cambridge generously offered hospitality and facilities for the conference. The conference marked the first anniversary of the publication of A Common Word Between Us and You, a letter from 138 (now 228) Islamic scholars, clerics and intellectuals promoting understanding and tolerance between Christians and Muslims. Addressed to Pope Benedict XVI after his Regensburg lecture, and to other Christian leaders, the letter warned that the survival of the world could be at stake if Muslims and Christians could not make peace with each other. Having participated in the Third International Conference on Coexistence and Peace-Making in Amman, Jordan from January 22-23rd, 2008, organized by The Jordanian Interfaith Coexistence Research Centre (JICRC), His Beatitude was keen to follow the further developments of this laudable initiative in Britain. He had known since 2006 of the Cambridge Inter-Faith Programme and had been hoping for some time to contribute to its work and offered the following paper (in Arabic and English) as his contribution to the Cambridge conference:
In the conference’s closing communiqué, published at Lambeth Palace on 15 October, the participants note:
Note: At Emmanuel College, His Beatitude met amongst other participants, the Vice-Chancellor of the University, Professor Alison Richard, his host for the evening, and the Master of the College, Lord Wilson of Dinton, who chaired the opening session of the conference. Although unable to stay to dinner in college on Sunday evening, in view of his early return to Rome next morning, His Beatitude was very appreciative of the history and tradition of collegiality that the University offered. On his walk through Cambridge to the conference venue, he was able to remark the beauty of the ancient college chapels, evidence of ancestral faith and the way in which, over its 800 year history – Cambridge celebrates its 800th. anniversary in 2009 – colleges have kept self-government, whilst working with faculties and the Vice-Chancellor’s central administration to make up the whole University, co-operating together for the benefit of all its members and society at large. His Beatitude remarked that collegiality is a theme of great interest to him in view of its relevance to ecclesial structures. V.C. |
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