THE UN AND URI CELEBRATE
THEIR ANNIVERSARIES TOGETHER AT GRACE CATHEDRAL
Dear John kurakar
It's been 15 full and fulfilling years since the United
Religions Initiative charter was signed, and this year has brought many
colorful and beautiful anniversary celebrations around the world. The most
recent occasion for celebration was last Saturday, June 27, 2015, when URI was
invited to join the 70th anniversary of the creation of the United Nations.
Dignitaries including United States Representative Nancy Pelosi; Asoke Kumar
Mukerji, India Ambassador to the United Nations; and Cristina Gallach, UN Under-Secretary-General
for Communications and Public Information joined URI Founder and President the
Right Rev. William E. Swing; URI Executive Director, the Rev. Victor Kazanjian;
and former URI Global Council Chair Rita Semel at a day-long celebration at San
Francisco's Grace Cathedral.
As you know, the
shared anniversary is no coincidence; URI takes its inspiration from the United
Nations. In fact, it was at the UN's 50th anniversary celebration, held at
Grace Cathedral in 1995, that the impetus for creating a "United
Religions" came to Bishop Swing. This idea then took five years of
planning until June 26, 2000, when the Charter of the United Religions
Initiative was signed.This year's celebration started Friday afternoon with a
celebration at San Francisco City Hall featuring UN Secretary General Ban
Ki-moon. At Friday night's dinner, held at the Fairmont Hotel, former Secretary
of State George Shultz, who also serves on the President's Council of the
United Religions Initiative, urged those in attendance to support the work of
the United Nations in combatting violent extremism. Earlier this year, while
testifying at the January 29th hearing of the US Senate Committee on Armed
Services on global threats and national security strategy, Secretary Shultz
singled out the United Religions Initiative as the kind of positive,
non-military approach that we must support to deal with the rising violence of
religious extremism.
Saturday's
celebration took place in Grace Cathedral, where hundreds of people joined to
hear guest speakers, listen to musical performances, and join in interactive
activities to further interfaith peacebuilding. During the celebration, URI was
also lauded in speeches by House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi; filmmaker and
international human rights scholar Grazyna Petra Kolondra, J. C. D., LL. M.;
and Marco Tavanti, Ph. D., professor at the School of Management, director of
the University of San Francisco Non Profit Administration and Graduate Program,
president of the Sustainable Capacity International Institute, and Co-Founder
of the World Engagement Institute.URI was represented by the Right Rev. William
E. Swing, who emceed Saturday'sevent and highlighted the link between URI and
the UN, and Executive Director Victor Kazanjian, who addressed URI's work in
the context of global peacebuilding.
Sally Mahé, Co-Director of Global Programs &
Organizational Development for URI, led the audience in an Appreciative Inquiry
session, where audience members were encouraged to engage in discussions with
the people around them to better connect and understand each other and the
paths that led them to this shared moment. Over the last 15
years, URI has caught the attention and imaginations of people from all walks
of life. The formation of URI, as told by its founder the Right Rev. William E.
Swing, in his recently released book "A Bishop's Quest: Founding a United
Religions", earned commendations from Former U.S. Presidents Jimmy Carter
and George H.W. Bush, the Most Reverend Desmond M. Tutu, Rabbi David Rosen,
former U.S. Secretary of Defense William J. Perry, and former U.S. Secretary of
State George P. Shultz, among many others.The anniversary month of June has
been celebrated by URI community members around the world as they share photos
and memories from the founding and convene for future peacebuilding work. There
are continued anniversary celebrations planned for the rest of the year across
many continents. To celebrate the United Religions Initiative's 15th
anniversary of the signing of its charter, members of the URI community are
exchanging reflections, memories, and hopes for the future.
U.R.I FOUNDER PRESIDENT
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