Tuesday, December 13, 2022

WCC NEWS: 2022 G20 Interfaith Forum contributes to global voices aimed at sustainable existence

The 2022 G20 Interfaith Forum convened in Abu Dhabi from 12-13 December under the theme “Engaging Faith Communities: G20 Agendas and Beyond.”
Ecumenical Patriarch His All Holiness Bartholomew addresses the G20 Interfaith Forum convened in Abu Dhabi on migration and climate change. Photo: Peter Prove/WCC
13 December 2022

The G20 Interfaith Forum Association was launched in 2014, during Australia’s presidency of the G20. It has progressed from a largely academic gathering timed to coincide with the G20 Summit to a sustained alliance of diverse religious leaders, practitioners from humanitarian, peacebuilding, and development organizations; and scholars. 

The underlying purpose is to contribute to and help to shape global agendas through practical and ethical experience and wisdom of the world’s diverse religious communities, which are often absent from global forums. The extensive contributions of the “network of networks” as well as the prophetic voice and leadership of renowned religious leaders can enrich the G20 deliberations and contribute, alongside parallel and often interlinked constituencies to addressing the urgent problems facing the world and its leaders.

Peter Prove, World Council of Churches director of international affairs, served as panelist during the G20 Interfaith Forum discussions, being one of the contributors at the session on Food crisis. Discussion was part of the Forum’s focus on polycrisis, or Interwoven crises impacting the vulnerable.

Ecumenical Patriarch His All Holiness Bartholomew addressed two topics essential to the conference: migration and climate change. “In a spirit of care and compassion for the entire world striving for a sustainable future, we wish to address the relationship between the climate crisis and migration,” he said. “We have dealt extensively with both topics in various international fora for many years.”

He further noted that climate change is pushing endangered species to the brink of extinction. “In the meantime, many migrants have been forced to flee from inhuman and degrading treatment and places where the consequences of climate change wreak chaos and destruction,” he said. “We must not ignore that environmental refugees have not caused climate disruption; however, the actions of others during years of overconsumption have affected these refugees most significantly.”

The Ecumenical Patriarch noted that, unfortunately, war, armed conflicts, poverty, environmental degradation, and climate change have forced people to leave their homelands. “It is logical and natural that most people want to reside and prosper in the country and region where they were born and where their families have dwelled for generations,” he said. "Yet to do so, they require safety, food security, economic opportunity, freedom from environmental distress, and prospects for their children’s futures.”

Read the full Address of His All-Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew at the 2022 G20 Interfaith Forum

2022 G20 Interfaith Forum

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The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service for a just and peaceful world. An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 352 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 580 million Christians in over 120 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC acting general secretary is Rev. Prof. Dr Ioan Sauca, from the Orthodox Church in Romania. 

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