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The Council for a Parliament of World Religions (CPWR)
convened from the 7th to 13th of July in Barcelona
bearing the theme: Pathways to Peace: the Wisdom of Listening, the Power of Commitment. According
to the Parliament’s Program the mission of the
CPWR is ‘to cultivate harmony among the world's
religious and spiritual communities and foster their
engagement with the world and its other guiding
institutions in order to achieve a peaceful, just,
and sustainable world’. The vision of the Council, according to their website (www.cpwr.org),
relates a strong message for all religions and their
members to take active social means to ensure that:
- The
Earth and all life are cherished, protected,
healed and restored
- Religious
and cultural fears and hatreds are replaced with
understanding and respect
- People
everywhere come to know and care for their
neighbours
- The
richness of human and religious diversity is
woven into the fabric of communal, civil,
societal and global life
- The
world's most powerful and influential
institutions move beyond narrow self-interest to
realize the common good
- Religious
and spiritual communities live in harmony and
contribute to a better world from their riches
of wisdom and compassion
- All people commit to living out
their highest values and aspiration
More
than 7000 religious leaders and lay people gathered
in Barcelona to attend CPWR held as part of the
Forum (9 May - 26 September), a global event to
promote cultural diversity, sustainable development
and conditions for peace. A special site was
creatively designed to foster this event located in
Diagonal Mar with its landmark, the Forum Building,
a massive triangular architectural feat covered in
water-containing-glass and mirror-steel made to
literally appear like a piece of the Mediterranean
Sea was cut and transferred there. All the
surrounding beach-front property was constructed
keeping in size and functionality with any downtown
American city with its tall buildings, amble parking
and shopping mall.
With the exception of the Catalan signs and
the solar intensity of the Mediterranean landscape,
the area surrounding the Forum could fit anywhere in
a globe increasingly populated by functional
aesthetics and post-modern urban sensibilities.
Each morning the CPWR started with spiritual and
religious observances, meditations and prayers.
There were literally hundreds of programs,
plenary sessions, symposia, exhibits, events
covering the traditions of Judaism, Christianity,
Islam, Hinduism, Jainism, Buddhism, Taoism,
Confucianism, Shinto, Indigenous religions and
modern-day cults. Debates by participants of highly
diverse religious and ethnic communities centred
around commitments on the issues of religious
violence, the plight of refugees worldwide, access
to safe water, and the elimination of developing
countries' debts.
Pertinent to the Common Declaration on
Religion and the Environment1 signed by
Pope John Paul II and the Ecumenical Patriarch
Bartholomew I in 2002 in Venice, was Puri Canals’,
President of the Catalonian environmental
organization DEPANA, suggestion to ‘engage the
Mediterranean people involved with mountain
conservation to promote a network for protection of
Mediterranean mountains as a source of water,
natural resources and spiritual values’.
In the words of Evelyn Tucker, a professor of
Religion and foremost proponent for the constructive
role religion can take towards ecology:
The Barcelona Parliament of World's Religions is an important
occasion to highlight the positive efforts of the
world's religions to respond to the growing
environmental crisis which is threatening the
foundations of life and ecosystems around the
planet. While comprehensive solutions to the
environmental crisis remain elusive, there is also
increasingly evident that human decisions, values,
and behaviour will be crucial for the survival of
many life forms on Earth.
Indeed
in our debates and discussions on world-peace we
must not forget to include our moral responsibility
for non-human sentient life and the common
environment we share with them. Religious
engagements with the environment had began with the
inter-religious meetings in Assisi in 1984, under
the sponsorship of the World Wildlife Fund (WWF),
and the Vatican in 1986. The reconvening of the
Parliament of World Religions in Chicago in 1993 and
in Cape Town in 1999 issued statements on Global
Ethics advocating human rights and environmental
issues. In August 2000 a gathering of some 2,000
religious leaders in New York occurred at the United
Nations Millennium World Peace Summit of Religious
and Spiritual Leaders. All leaders signed
a ‘Commitment to Global Peace’ and resolved to
address the inter-related pressing problems of
conflict, poverty and the environment.
The
CPWR was by and large a success
in renewing old commitments and putting forth
new initiatives for the world’s religions to face
the many social and environmental challenges of our
future and inspire globally grass-root movements
with similar aims. Scheduled speakers for the
seven-day event included Iranian Nobel Prize-winner
Shirin Ebadi; Ela Gandhi, a South African peace
activist and granddaughter of Mahatma Gandhi; German
theologian Hans Kung; primatologist and activist
Jane Goodall; alternative-health expert and author
Deepak Chopra; and Sri Mata Amritanandamayi Devi
(a.k.a. Amma) of India, noted worldwide for blessing
her followers with a warm embrace. Tenzin Gyatso,
the Fourteenth Dalai Lama of Tibet was unable to
speak at the opening plenary session as he had to
cancel, according to the Casa del Tibet in
Barcelona, because of unexpected illness and not due
to Chinese pressure, as reported by Spanish
participants, which claimed that the Chinese
threatened to remove the terracotta warriors of
X’ian in temporary display at the Forum. A small
but notable presence of Tibetan-related activities
at CPWR included the on-site construction and
display of the Kalachakra mandala for world-peace
(approx 4 meters in diameter) in the
Rambla de Santa Mónica. One of the most significant
characteristics of the creation and offering of a
sand mandala is its transitory nature. This
transience or ‘impermanence’ of all phenomena is
a fundamental feature in Buddhist philosophy and
reminds us that nothing lasts forever, and that it
is necessary not to respond with obsession and
strife towards our surroundings. For this reason,
and after performing the ceremonies of dissolution,
on July 16th the Tibetan monks dismantled the
largest ever in the West coloured-sand mandala. At
5:47 pm, following a large procession towards the
Maremagum bridge, the mandala was thrown in to the
Mediterranean Sea. “The event was dedicated to the
animals that live under here, so they can share
peace with us,” said Thubten Wangchen, Director of
Barcelona’s Tibetan cultural centre, who added
that, “even though human rights are not respected
in Tibet or China, our philosophy is to teach people
how to be happy. We can still be happy despite our
problems. The Chinese teach us how to be patient.”
Notes
1.
For a reproduction of the Declaration see
Tucker (2003), Worldly Wonder: Religions Enter their Ecological Phase, Appendix V. |