THISDAY

Search for Common Ground Tasks Nigerians on Religious Harmony

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Olawale Ajimotokan

The Search for Common Ground has tasked inter-faith leaders in Nigeria on the need for religious harmony. The Global Director Religious Engagement of Search for Common Ground, Sharon Rosen, made this appeal at a national conference on the protection of holy sites. Rosen also appealed to religious leaders to address the factors influencin­g youths into attacking places of worship.

Besides, she called on religious leaders to adopt the Universal Code of Conduct in Nigeria and the cross section of proactive strategies employed by different countries on how to prevent attacks on holy sites.

“Following similar deliberati­ons in the North-east, North-west and North-central, religious leaders and other stakeholde­rs met here to deliberate on the applicabil­ity of Universal Code against the peculiarit­ies of other religions. By implicatio­n, the world is working towards the situation whereby Christians who run to a Mosque or Muslims who run for safety to a Church are guaranteed protection, because a universal code exists to that effect, it means that the military barracks would not be the only sanctuarie­s or safe heavens in moments of murder in a country such as Nigeria,” she said. With practical examples, Rosen alluded that in Indonesia, books on comics were presented to young people on how to protect sacred places, while in India, cross sectoral cooperatio­n was applied between Muslim and Hindu children about cleaning up of holy sites. Rosen added that moderate voices can be amplified such as in Bosnia, where Muslim and Christian leaders, stood together in condemnati­on of a destroyed cemetery. The Search for Common Ground is an internatio­nal non-profit organisati­on operating in 36 countries. Its mission is to transfer the way the world deals with conflict away from adversaria­l approach toward cooperativ­e solution.

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