Euro-Asia

Moscow conference highlights upswing in religious extremism

Seventh-day Adventist religious liberty leader Ganoune Diop addressed the diverse group of public and religious representatives who came together to consider shared international concerns.

ESD PARL/Bettina Krause

The event, the Third International Forum on Religion and Peace, was jointly organized by Russia’s Presidential Council for Cooperation with Religious Organizations, and Moscow’s department of National Policy, Inter-Regional Relations, and Tourism. It was supported by Russian President Vladimir Putin and Russian Orthodox Patriarch Kirill of Moscow, along with other religious and public leaders. Pastor Franklin Graham, son of well-known evangelist Billy Graham, attended the forum, along with Metropolitan Hilarion, director of the Department for External Church Relations of Russian Orthodox Church, and Sheikh-ul-Islam Allahshukur Pashazade, chairman of the Caucasian Muslims Office.

The Seventh-day Adventist Church was represented by Dr. Ganoune Diop, director of Public Affairs and Religious Liberty (PARL) department for the world church, and Pastor Oleg Goncharov, PARL director for the church in Euro-Asia.

In his address to the assembly, Diop focused on the foundational place of religious freedom within the pantheon of human rights. He emphasized that it is a God-given right, not one subject to political agendas, and he urged all those present to work together to preserve and extend this “first freedom.”

On the day before the forum, Diop and Goncharov visited the national Duma, or parliament, to meet with various public officials responsible for church-state relations in Russia. They also met with Alexander Kudryavtsev, who heads one of Russia’s most active public organizations focused on religious liberty, the Russian Association for the Protection of Religious Freedoms (RARF).

At the conclusion of the forum, the participants adopted a resolution expressing deep concern about rising religious extremism. They also urged greater action on the part of the international community in stemming the continued destruction of Christian communities in the Middle East and Africa, and they expressed solidarity with all those suffering persecution for their faith.

 

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