soutenir la religion dans une société pluraliste et dans la vie publique canadienne

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Changes and crises in our communities require the understandings and practices of spirituality and faith to help people cope.  Interfaith Grand River (IGR) has increasingly been called upon to work with community organizations and governments to address issues in Region of Waterloo which is situated on lands traditionally used by the Attawandaron, the Anishnabeg, and the Haudenosaunee peoples in what is now called south-western Ontario.

The Canadian Interfaith Conversation is very pleased to announce that Shaila Kibria Carter has been affirmed as the new Co-Chair for a three-year term beginning July 1, 2022. The Executive Committee had unanimously supported her nomination to the Participant Assembly to serve as the next Co-Chair.

This event is being postponed to a later date, still to be determined.

The Canadian Interfaith Conversation will host a gathering focused on children’s rights in relation to spiritual development on April 1, from 1:00 to 3:00 PM, at the University of Toronto Multi-Faith Centre, 569 Spadina Avenue.

Participants will be invited into dialogue on the role of faith leaders and faith communities in supporting young people to realize their rights, including their right to spiritual development. Questions to be addressed include:

The Canadian Interfaith Conversation was established to promote harmony and religious insight among religions and religious communities in Canada, strengthen our society’s moral foundations, and work for greater realization of the fundamental freedom of conscience and religion for the sake of the common good and an engaged citizenship. The reports of antisemitic carnivals held in Aalst, Belgium are deeply troubling, and they stand in opposition to the core principles of the Canadian Interfaith Conversation and its desire for constructive expressions of religious and cultural pluralism.

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