Dawn Street
(8
May 2008)
"Brussels turns to gods for help with climate change"
Brussels turns to gods for help with climate change
06.05.2008 - 09:40 CET | By Teresa
Küchler
EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS - Brussels officials
have turned to religious VIPs to help spread the gospel of an environmentally
friendly society and increase awareness of climate change in their parishes, as
well as promoting tolerance between different confessions in Europe.
Twenty high-level representatives – 19 men and one woman - from European
Christian, Jewish and Muslim congregations met in Brussels on Monday (5 may) to
discuss the sensitive issues of climate change and reconciliation between
peoples.
The meeting was co-chaired by European Commission
President Jose Manuel Barroso, Slovenian Prime Minister and current president of
the European Council, Janez Jansa, and the president of the European Parliament,
Hans-Gert Poettering.
Mr Barroso told a press conference that churches,
mosques and temples could all play an important role in identifying and
implementing solutions to the challenge of climate change.
"Thanks to
their moral authority, their outreach and their structure, they are well placed
to make a valuable contribution, mobilising our societies for a sustainable
future," the president said.
Prime Minister Jansa, referring to both the
Bible and the Koran, said: "Earth was created and given to man, and man has to
be respectful of what he has been given," and called for what the late Pope John
Paul II described as an "ecological conversion".
"The success in the
fights against climate change relies to a great extent on changes in our habits,
in our philosophies in our world outlook and the consumer society that has
created superficial needs - needs that justify consumption."
Mr Jansa
also announced that Slovenia plans to set up a Euro-Mediterranean university
that will be a meeting place for students from the Christian, Muslim and Jewish
world. The school's charter is to be signed in Ljubljana in June.
Bishop
Adrianus Van Luyn, the president of the Council of European Bishops' Conferences
(COMECE), suggested that the EU appoint a "High Representative for Future
Generations".
Who was not invited?
On the second
topic of the meeting, "Reconciliation through Intercultural Dialogue", President
Barroso underlined the importance of combining freedom of expression and respect
for other faiths, in an attempt to sooth both Islamic outrage in recent years
and others' fear of Islam.
"Islam today is part of Europe. One should
not see Islam as outside Europe. We already have an important presence of Islam
and Muslims among our citizens," Mr Barroso said, adding that the inter-faith
dialogue proved that the "preachers of a clash of civilisations are
wrong."
The grand mufti of Bosnia-Herzegovina, Dr Mustafa Ceric pointed
to the EU's policy on Turkey.
"Following this logic, Europe has to prove
that Islam is part of Europe by not delaying the acceptance of Turkey to the
EU," the cleric said.
Others criticised the invitation list for Monday's
inter-faith meeting.
Flanked by a female priest colleague, Swedish
archbishop Anders Weyrud [Lutheran] told EUobserver he was disappointed there
was only one woman among the religious dignitaries, pastor Letizia Tomassone,
the vice-president of the federation of evangelical churches of Italy, who had
also raised the point during the inter-religious meeting.
"We have
neglected both nature and women, that was one of the messages we tried to get
across at this meeting," the archbishop said.
From its headquarters just
across the street from the inter-religious meeting, a spokesperson from the
church of scientology, a faith that is growing rapidly in Europe, told
EUobserver that Brussels should also look at minority religions in Europe when
deciding who to put on the invitation list for upcoming meetings.
"We
want to have an open and transparent dialogue with the institutions, just as
with the leaders who were invited to the [European] commission today. It has to
be a full dialogue, with minority religions also represented, and not a
selective dialogue," Mr Fabio Amicarelli said.
Meanwhile some MEPs have
in the past questioned the presence of religious figures in strictly political
fora in Brussels.
The parliament's Party Working Group on the Separation
of Religion and Politics in a letter to Hans-Gert Poettering last year wrote:
"It is unbecoming for any of the EU institutions to provide an exclusive
platform to any particular grouping, including religions, in particular as the
majority of European citizens are not religious or no longer practice their
religion."
"Thus millions of individual citizens do not have a voice in
the dialogue," the letter concluded.
According to a recent Eurobarometer
survey, some 48 percent of European citizens claim to be non-confessional.