January 25 2006
Archbishop of Canterbury: Remarks at a reception
to mark the inaugural meeting of the Christian-Muslim Forum 24th
January 2006
Prime Minister, friends it's a very great delight
to be able to welcome you here on this, I hope, historic occasion.
Although today is overshadowed very seriously
for all of us by our great loss in the death of Zaki Badawi earlier
today, this event also helps to focus something of what we might
hope for in the work of this forum. Because one thing that certainly
could be said of Zaki was that he managed to make Islam ordinary
and expected, a part of the British scene. Someone who was a spokesman
for an important and recognised element in the British community
overall. Someone who spoke, you might say, for Muslims as citizens
of this country.
And in a way that is part of the agenda of the
forum, as it evolves. We're looking for conversation and co-operation
between two communities of faith that will remind the whole of our
society that faith is a perfectly normal activity for human beings,
indeed those of us who are committed would say that it's the most
normal activity you could possibly imagine. And instead of being
an eccentricity, practised by slightly weird British people and
very very strange foreigners, it's just something that belongs in
the fabric of civic life in this country and which makes, I dare
to say, an irreplaceable contribution to the civic life of this
country.
We are not people of faith because we want to
make a contribution to civic life; we are people of faith because
we believe that what we believe is true. Nonetheless, we need to
say in a society that's both sceptical and chaotic at the moment,
that the commitments of faith to human dignity and liberty are essential
to the life of a healthy society. I think that the presence of the
Prime Minister with us here tonight is testimony to the fact that
this is something increasingly recognised in our public life. What
we do here in terms of Christian Muslim co-operation and conversation,
is part of two wider pictures. One of them, as you've been reminded,
is the picture of interfaith co-operation overall. The new forum
takes its place alongside other more established networks which
seek to promote understanding and co-operation. But the other wider
picture is the international one, and it's very interesting to look
back at the last decade or more in which this forum has been growing
to maturity, and see how it takes its place alongside a whole international
programme, working for understanding and co-operation.
My predecessor put in place a number of vitally
important initiatives in this respect, it was he who began the work
which has led to the establishment of this forum. It was he who
oversaw the beginnings of the dialogue that we continue between
the Church of England and al-Azhar in Cairo. It was he who, of course,
saw through the formation of the Alexandria declaration with the
hopes that that provided of religious communities in the Holy Land
contributing to reconciliation there.
And that international situation is something
which becomes more and more evident and immediate to us in this
country, day by day. As our whole world evolves the old idea of
nation states with impervious boundaries becomes more and more improbable
and unreal. We are all involved like it or not, in global conversations
and exchanges. Our political habits, our religious convictions are
no longer to be seen as local peculiarities, they are part of one
story across the world.
Just before Christmas, my wife and I spent a
week in Pakistan. A very eventful week where I think it is fair
to say we were worked to our limits and almost beyond, but a week,
which opened up any number of conversations, opened any number of
doors, with repercussions here. Before we went we asked both Christian
and Muslim Pakistani communities in this country what they might
want to hear from Pakistan when we visited there. When we were in
Pakistan, we were repeatedly questioned about what was happening
in Christian Muslim dialogue in this country. And that was a very
vivid reminder at all sorts of levels, of the interlocking world
we live in. And one phrase which sticks with me from that encounter
in Pakistan was something which came out in one of the several meetings
we had with Ijaz ul-Haq, the minister for ethnic minorities and
religious affairs in Pakistan. He spoke of how easy it was to pursue
dialogue and friendship at the level of elites, ‘Now,' he said,
‘now we must take this to the villages.' Well, we may not have villages
in the United Kingdom that are quite like villages in Pakistan,
but the principle is the same.
This is not about elites, this is about ordinary
people talking to each other in ordinary circumstances and working
together on the needs and the challenges that face us all. The challenges
that are represented by an educational system which is not always
easy for minorities. The challenges represented by international
affairs, the challenges by the gulfs that open up between young
people and their elders in all areas of our community, the challenges
of sustaining our commitment to family life and its values in a
culture that again doesn't always seem to affirm them very clearly.
But all that, of course, is to present a rather
negative picture, and in taking it to the villages, I wouldn't want
us to think that we were primarily concerned about damage limitation
and reacting to crises. We want to uncover for one another, and
in one another, and for the wider world; that richness of humanity
which faith contains, and that, too, was something affirmed very
powerfully in many of our encounters in Pakistan before Christmas.
In spite of the very deep tensions there are there, in spite of
the sufferings endured by a Christian minority there, often harassed
and persecuted by ignorant neighbours, in spite of the sense of
vulnerability that Pakistan, like the rest of the Muslim world feels,
in our world generally today, the willingness of people to engage
with one another, take risks with one another, even there, was hugely
impressive and inspiring. And we came back from that visit with
a real sense of enormous possibilities in Pakistan, barely yet beginning
to be realised.
Well, our challenges and our possibilities are
both extreme in the world as it is, but the other thing which was
said to me in Pakistan more than once and which I am happy to repeat
here, is that we have to get out of any remnants of a mindset which
thinks in terms of a clash of civilisations. That rhetoric does
the rounds every so often, it depends on indifferent history, over
bold projection and, generally, mutual ignorance. We can do better
than that, and the Muslim Christian Forum here in Britain is designed
to help us do better than that, to think not of a clash of civilisations,
but of a shared religious humanism in the proper sense of the word
‘humanism,' a commitment to the dignity and the liberty of human
beings made to serve God. Human beings who find their fullest freedom
and the deepest joy in the service of God, and who in sharing that
together, have something to offer to society around which nothing
else can offer. It's a very ambitious vision with which to begin
the work of the Forum, but I think that is where all those involved
want to start. And they would see it as I've said not only as something
for this country, but as something which ought to be making a contribution
to a global challenge.
It's easy to talk about these things abstractly
so I'll end by quoting to you a story I came across recently from
a most unlikely quarter. The book I'm reading from is an excellent
book by Brian McClaren, an American Evangelical, pastor of a large
independent church in the Washington DC area. The sort of Christian
pastor who arouses a certain amount of anxiety in the breasts both
of Muslims and of more liberal Christians, not to say columnists
in some of our newspapers. The book is entitled, though, ‘A Generous
Orthodoxy' and it ahs a long and extraordinarily moving chapter
on his approach to people of other faiths. Towards the end of this
chapter McClaren quotes from another writer from the same background
telling a little story about an encounter in the Washington DC area
not long after September 11th. One day my daughter saw a woman walking
towards us covered in a veil and asked the inevitable ‘What's that,
Mummy?' ‘Emma,' I answered, ‘that lady is a Muslim from a faraway
place and she dresses like that and covers her head with a veil
because she loves God. That is how their people show they love God.'
My daughter considered these words, she stared at the woman who
passed us, she pointed at the woman and then pointed at my hair
and further quizzed ‘Mummy, do you love God?' ‘Yes,' I said, ‘I
do; you and I are Christians and Christian ladies show their love
for God by going to church, eating the bread and drinking the wine,
serving the poor and giving to those in need. We don't wear veils
but we do love God.'
After this Emma took every opportunity to point
to Muslim women during our shopping trips and telling me ‘Mummy,
she loves God.' One day we were getting out of our car in our driveway
at the same time as our Pakistani neighbours. Emma saw the mother
beautifully veiled and pointed at her and shouted ‘Look Mummy –
she loves God.' My neighbour was surprised, I told her what I had
told her what I had taught Emma about Muslim ladies loving God,
while she held back tears this near stranger hugged me saying, ‘I
wish all Americans would teach their children so, the world would
be better.'
That perhaps is – as simply as that – what we
have to teach; that, perhaps, is what the Muslim Christian Forum
by the Grace of God can achieve, thank you for being with us this
evening.
Anglican Communion News Service, London
(c) Rowan Williams 2006
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Inaugural meeting of the Christian Muslim forum at Lambeth
Palace 24 January. Photo Credit: ACNS Rosenthal
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The work begins for the Christian Muslim forum at their first
meeting at Lambeth Palace on 24th January. Photo Credit:
ACNS Rosenthal
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Launch of Christian Muslim
Forum 24th January at Lambeth Palace.
Photo Credit: ACNS Rosenthal |
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