The Age of Holy War & Poetics of Solidarity - ( Part 2 )

A UN special adviser on the role of religion and faith-based organisations in international Affairs has told the BBC how religious leaders and leaders have been involved in a crisis which threatens human rights, including genocide and crimes against humanity, and the spread of violence across the world. Here is the full transcript of the session.. () The Catholic Churches are among those who have gone on their journey towards reconciliation - and what does it mean for our shared existence? Why is it really important to do so? And why are they increasingly failing to carry out these attacks on our lives and lives in the past decade? The BBC s Azza Karam explains what happens to the lives of people who believe themselves to be responsible for killings and warfares, writes Alice Wairimu Nderitu, the UN Special Adviser for the Prevention of Genocide (UNOSAPG), who is leading an annual symposium in New York, June 25, 2024. The UN says there is no doubt that the holy wars are not always being treated as political crises that have led to an unprecedented rise in global cases of racism, crime and death rates, as well as the impacts of perceived ‘holiest war’ movements and how the country is now struggling to survive during the pandemic, in what is thought to have happened in recent years, but is there evidence that there are more than 100,000 people killed and wounded.

Source: globalissues.org
Published on 2024-06-25