
Parliament poster
People of faith are being called to attend the 2023 Parliament of the World’s Religions whose theme will be "A Call to Conscience: Defending Freedom & Human Rights."
The Parliament is compelled to address the most pressing issue of our time, said PoWR’s executive director, the Rev. Stephen Avino.
“Freedom, human rights, and democracy are under attack all over the world,” Rev. Avino said in announcing the theme. “The Parliament started 2022 calling attention to the attack on the human right to vote in the country where the next Parliament Convening will be located and we have released a clear statement on the illegal invasion of Ukraine. These are just some of the myriad examples of current events that demonstrate a rise of autocracy.
"People of faith and conscience must stand up together in all their diversity and defend freedom and human rights.”
At the 1993 Parliament in Chicago, the declaration Towards a Global Ethic affirmed human rights as defined in the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights of the United Nations. The Global Ethic also states:
“After two world wars and the end of the cold war, the collapse of fascism and nazism, the shaking to the foundations of communism and colonialism, humanity has entered a new phase of its history. Today we possess sufficient economic, cultural, and spiritual resources to introduce… a vision of peoples living peacefully together, of ethnic and ethical groupings and of religions sharing responsibility for the care of Earth. A vision rests on hopes, goals, ideals, standards.... it is the communities of faith who bear a responsibility to demonstrate that such hopes, ideals, and standards can be guarded, grounded, and lived.”
"This remains true three decades later," said Rev. Avino. "We must nonviolently guard and exemplify these ‘hopes, ideals, and standards’ and not let the world slip back into the old phase of history. It is our moral responsibility."
The 2023 Parliament Convening in Chicago will address the threat of climate change, the dignity of women and girls, the rights of Indigenous peoples, engaging the next generation, peace, justice, the reduction of inequalities, and more. The Parliament continues to use the word “parliament” according to its archaic meaning: a safe place for civil discourse. It will be a place of open minds and open hearts where all can express the wonder and dignity of their religious and spiritual traditions.
“But we could not do all this without addressing the foundational issue of our time; the threat to freedom and human rights,” said Rev. Avino. “We must defend freedom and human rights together and find solutions to the rise of autocracy in our world.”
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The Parliament of the World’s Religions began in 1893 against the backdrop of the World's Fair, also known as the Columbian Exposition, in Chicago. A century later in 1993, it was revived in Chicago and scheduled to repeat each decade with smaller regional meetings in between. According to its website, “Parliament Convenings attract participants from more than 200 diverse religious, indigenous, and secular beliefs and more than 80 nations.”
PoWR’s vision is “a world of peace, justice, and sustainability,” fostered by the common values held by a majority of the world’s religions and faith traditions. Its mission is two-fold:
- To cultivate harmony among the world’s religious and spiritual communities;
- To foster their engagement with the world and its guiding institutions to address timely critical issues.