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MFA: FM Addresses UN Assembly on Interfaith/Intercultural Dialogue

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  • MFA: FM Addresses UN Assembly on Interfaith/Intercultural Dialogue

    PRESS RELEASE
    Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia
    Contact: Information Desk
    Tel: (374-10) 52-35-31
    Email: [email protected]
    Web: http://www.ArmeniaForeignMinistry.am


    Minister Oskanian Addresses UN Assembly on Interfaith and Intercultural
    Dialogue


    Minister Vartan Oskanian addressed the UN High-Level Session on
    Interreligious and Intercultural Dialogue. Sponsored by the Phillipines and
    Pakistan, the session was dedicated to the need to promote dialog between
    cultures and religions for the purpose of securing peace.

    Armenia's Foreign Minister joined several dozen ministers and high-level
    government officials to address the session.


    REMARKS BY
    H.E. VARTAN OSKANIAN
    MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS
    REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA
    UN INTERFAITH AND INTERCULTURAL HIGH LEVEL DIALOGUE
    NEW YORK
    Oct 4. 2007



    Dear Colleagues,

    As an ancient people, serving as the perennial buffer between empires, on
    the most trampled path on earth, Armenians have become living witnesses of
    the benefit of dialogue between and within cultures. We have been engaged in
    that international exchange for ages. Today, we in Armenia are among its
    greatest promoters, especially in our neighborhood.

    Our geography has compelled us to seek bridges with peoples and cultures
    different from our own. If we have an independent state today, it is because
    we succeeded in perpetuating our identity even as we interacted and
    exchanged with societies around us.

    It is because of our experience that we feel compelled to continually search
    for non-traditional ways to approach the overarching issue of our time:
    living at peace in a pluralist world.

    Not only have we lived in a pluralist neighborhood, we have, because of
    genocide and dispersion, had to set up homes and shops in nearly every
    country on earth. This began when Armenian genocide survivors were welcomed
    and happily integrated into the fabric of the Arab Middle East. Religious
    differences did not preclude inclusion. Our Diaspora, living as it did
    across borders became both the means and the beneficiary of international
    exchange and dialogue.

    We are living witnesses then to the fact that religious and linguistic
    differences need not translate to enmity and exclusion. It is intolerance --
    from its simplest form to its most complex -- a rejection of individuals¹
    human dignity, that causes ruptures in and between societies.

    To build a peace atop pain and destruction, it is clear that solutions can
    only be found through the genuine and universal acceptance and application
    of basic, fundamental individual and collective human rights.

    Those rights include the right to determine one¹s destiny, to live free of
    security and oppression. The struggle of our brothers and sisters in Nagorno
    Karabakh is exactly that - a struggle for the most basic human right, the
    right to live free. It is not a struggle against anyone¹s religion or
    culture. The effort to seek support against their struggle by relying on
    ethnic and religious solidarity belies the universality of their claim -
    that people everywhere - whether Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh,
    Palestinians, or the people of Darfur - all deserve to live freely and in
    dignity.


    As societies which had experienced pain and suffering at the hands of
    oppressors, we must teach and rely on the moral, ethical, social and
    political benefits of tolerance and cooperation, and not feed the fears of
    otherness and exclusion.

    The frustrations, the resentments and the hostilities of victims of
    xenophobia and racism, should not be underestimated or dismissed. The
    Security implications of pent-up anger, of daily humiliations and
    hopelessness cannot be exaggerated. These must concern us all, for reasons
    of principle as well as enlightened self-interest.

    Our objective is a country and a world where the rights of individuals and
    groups are respected, where each neighborhood and each community, each city
    and country, each region and continent, are safe havens for all who live or
    travel there. Religion is used to tear people apart, as are economic
    disparities, language and ideology. But the frustrating and fascinating
    contradiction is that it is faith and humanity that also bind people
    together.
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