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ENVIRONMENT AND DEVELOPMENT
A statement to the World Summit on Sustainable Development by the Bahá’í International Community
Johannesburg, South AfricaOver the course of the 20th century, ethnic, racial and national prejudices have increasingly given way to the recognition that humankind is a single family and the earth its common homeland.1 The United Nations (UN), which was created in response to this dawning recognition, has worked tirelessly to bring about a world where all peoples and nations can live together in peace and harmony. To help bring about this world, the UN has crafted a remarkable framework of international institutions, processes, conventions and global action plans that have helped to prevent conflict and warfare, to protect human rights, to nurture equality between women and men, and to uplift the material conditions of countless individuals and communities.
Despite these significant achievements, the United Nations has yet to grasp fully both the constructive role that religion can play in creating a peaceful and prosperous global order, and the destructive impact that religious fanaticism can have on the stability and progress of the world. This lack of attention to religion can be clearly seen in the development realm, where the United Nations has, for the most part, viewed religious communities merely as channels for the delivery of goods and services, and as mechanisms to carry out development policies and programs. Moreover, while the United Nations' human rights machinery has been used to condemn religious intolerance and persecution,2 UN development policies and programs3 have hardly begun to address religious bigotry as a major obstacle to peace and well-being.4
It is becoming increasingly clear that passage to the culminating stage in the millennia long process of the organization of the planet as one home for the entire human family cannot be accomplished in a spiritual vacuum. Religion, the Bahá'í Scriptures aver, "is the source of illumination, the cause of development and the animating impulse of all human advancement"5 and "has been the basis of all civilization and progress in the history of mankind."6 It is the source of meaning and hope for the vast majority of the planet's inhabitants, and it has a limitless power to inspire sacrifice, change and long-term commitment in its followers.7 It is, therefore, inconceivable that a peaceful and prosperous global society - a society which nourishes a spectacular diversity of cultures and nations - can be established and sustained without directly and substantively involving the world's great religions in its design and support.8
At the same time, it cannot be denied that the power of religion has also been perverted to turn neighbor against neighbor. The Bahá'í Scriptures state that "religion must be the source of fellowship, the cause of unity and the nearness of God to man. If it rouses hatred and strife, it is evident that absence of religion is preferable and an irreligious man is better than one who professes it."9 So long as religious animosities are allowed to destabilize the world, it will be impossible to foster a global pattern of sustainable development: the central goal of this Summit.
Given the record of religious fanaticism, it is understandable that the United Nations has been hesitant to invite religion into its negotiations. However, the UN can no longer afford to ignore the immeasurable good that religions have done and continue to do in the world, or the salubrious, far-reaching contributions that they can make to the establishment of a peaceful, prosperous and sustainable global order. Indeed, the United Nations will only succeed in establishing such a global order to the extent that it taps into the power and vision of religion. To do so will require accepting religion not merely as a vehicle for the delivery and execution of development initiatives, but as an active partner in the conceptualization, design, implementation and evaluation of global policies and programs.10 The historically justified wall separating the United Nations and religions11 must fall to the imperatives of a world struggling toward unity and justice.12
The real onus, however, is on the religions themselves. Religious followers and, more important, religious leaders must show that they are worthy partners in the great mission of building a sustainable world civilization. To do so will require that religious leaders work conscientiously and untiringly to exorcise religious bigotry and superstition13 from within their faith traditions. It will necessitate that they embrace freedom of conscience for all people, including their own followers,14 and renounce claims to religious exclusivity and finality.15
It should not be imagined that the acceptance of religion as a partner within the United Nations will be anything but gradual or that religious hostilities will be eliminated any time soon. But the desperate needs of the human family make further delay in addressing the role of religion unacceptable.
For its part, the United Nations might begin the process of substantively involving religion in deliberations on humankind's future by hosting an initial gathering of religious leaders convoked, perhaps, by the Secretary-General. As a first priority, the leaders might call for a convention on freedom of religion and belief to be drafted and ratified, as expeditiously as possible, by the governments of the world, with the assistance of religious communities.16 Such an action by the world's religious leaders, which would signal their willingness to accept freedom of conscience for all peoples, would significantly reduce tensions in the world. The gathering might also discuss the foundation within the United Nations System of a permanent religious forum, patterned initially perhaps on the UN's recently founded Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues. The creation of this body would be an important initial step toward fully integrating religion into the UN's work of establishing a peaceful world order.17
For their part, religious leaders will need to show that they are worthy of participation in such a forum. Only those religious leaders who make it clear to their followers that prejudice, bigotry and violence have no place in the life of a religious person should be invited to participate in the work of this body.
It is evident that the longer the United Nations delays the meaningful involvement of religion in its work, the longer humanity will suffer the ravages of injustice and disunity.18 It is equally clear that until the religions of the world renounce fanaticism and work whole-heartedly to eliminate it from within their own ranks, peace and prosperity will prove chimerical. Indeed, the responsibility for the plight of humanity rests, in large part, with the world's religious leaders. It is they who must raise their voices to end the hatred, exclusivity, oppression of conscience, violations of human rights, denial of equality, opposition to science, and glorification of materialism, violence and terrorism, which are perpetrated in the name of religious truth. Moreover, it is the followers of all religions who must transform their own lives and take up the mantle of sacrifice for and service to the well-being of others, and thus contribute to the realization of the long-promised reign of peace and justice on earth.
3. Although some of the global action plans from recent United Nations conferences suggest
that misuse of religion poses an obstacle to development, the few references that they do contain neither explore the effects of
religious bigotry and violence on development and security, nor offer any notable solutions. (See, e.g., The Vienna
Declaration and Programme of Action, II-22, 38; The Copenhagen Declaration and Programme of Action, 69; The
Platform for Action of the Fourth World Conference on Women, 24, 80 (f), 131, 224; The Habitat Agenda, 25; We the
Peoples: the Role of the United Nations in the Twenty-First Century, 200; and The Declaration of the World Conference
against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance, 59-60.)
Agenda 21 mentions
religion, but with no reference to the impact that its misuse has on development (see, Agenda 21, 5.53, 6.1, 6.3, 6.4, 6.12,
6.32, 6.34 (a)(i), 36.13 (a)). Moreover, the Programme for the Further Implementation of Agenda 21, which was produced at
the Earth Summit +5, contains no mention at all of religion, and the Draft Plan of Implementation for the World Summit on
Sustainable Development that was negotiated at the Fourth Preparatory Committee session (27 May - 7 June 2002), mentions
religion but once, and then only in the context of ensuring that the delivery of basic health care services is "consistent with
…. cultural and religious values" (A/CONF199/PC/L.5, #45). This omission of the destructive effects of religious fanaticism on
sustainable development from the global action plans emanating from the Earth Summit, the Earth Summit +5, and the World Summit
on Sustainable Development, is all the more striking, given that some of the conferences of the 1990's did, at least, express
concern about religious intolerance.
4. In its efforts to combat terrorism, the
United Nations has been hesitant to address religious fanaticism. Through a series of resolutions, treaties and actions, the
United Nations has sought concerted international cooperation to combat terrorism, branding it "one of the most serious threats
to international peace and security in the twenty-first century" and inimical to "global stability and prosperity." (S/RES1377
(2001)). Yet, at the same time, the UN has been reticent to identify religious fanaticism as a source of terrorism, referring to
it, if at all, mostly indirectly - e.g., "terrorism motivated by intolerance or extremism" (S/RES/1373 (2001)). In those few
instances when it is mentioned directly, it is included in a list of various justifications - e.g., "criminal acts intended to
provoke a state of terror…are...unjustifiable, whatever the considerations of a political, philosophical, ideological, racial,
ethnic, religious or other nature that may be invoked to justify them." (A/RES/55/158, para 2; see also A/57/37, Annex III,
Article 5, Report of the Ad Hoc Committee [charged with drafting a Comprehensive Convention on International
Terrorism] Established by General Assembly Resolution 51/210 of 17 December 1996; and the International Convention
for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism, Article 6). Interestingly, even the various resolutions that were issued
by the Security Council, the General Assembly and the Commission on Human Rights in response to the terrorist acts of 11
September 2001, failed to identify religious fanaticism as the force animating those acts (to find allusion to this fanatical
motivation, one has to look to speeches by the UN Secretary-General: "We are in a moral struggle to fight an evil that is
anathema to all faiths." SG/SM8013, Message of the Secretary-General Kofi Annan to the Warsaw Conference on Combating
Terrorism, 6 November 2001.) This hesitancy to acknowledge and forcefully condemn the religious bigotry motivating terrorist
acts weakens the effectiveness of the UN's efforts to bring an end to international terrorism. For, it is only by identifying
and understanding the peculiar motivation behind such acts that they can be effectively combated.
BIC Document #02-0826
©Copyright 2002, Bahá'í International Community
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