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Buddhists, Catholics begin new dialogue at Focolare headquarters


Buddhists and Catholics from the United States are taking part in a meeting for the first time this week, focused on the themes of 'Suffering, Liberation and Fraternity'. The five day event, which opened today (Tuesday) at the headquarters of the Focolare movement in Castelgandolfo, includes 46 Buddhist and Catholic participants from New York, Chicago, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington DC.

In his opening address to the group, which will meet with Pope Francis on Wednesday, the president of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue (PCID) Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran said: "in a world where diversity is seen as a threat", the encounter is "a sign of our openness towards one another and our commitment to human fraternity."

"We are all pilgrims", he stressed, adding that the dialogue between Buddhists and Catholics is part of "our ongoing quest to grasp the mystery of our lives and the ultimate Truth".

The meeting is jointly sponsored by the PCID and the US Bishops' Committee for Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs. In an interview with Philippa Hitchens on Vatican Radio, one of the participants, Fr Leo Lefebure SJ, a theology professor at Georgetown University said the PCID asked the US Conference of Catholic Bishops to begin a new series of conversations focused on the theme of 'Be friends and help the world' so the dialogue will explore beliefs and ideas that "resonate across both traditions", especially the concepts of 'suffering and the end of suffering'.

He noted that the basic values and virtues of Buddhists and Catholics "converge to a great degree" and there is a long history in the United States of leaders of both traditions coming together to oppose violence and work towards peaceful transformation of conflict.

Fr Leo says that every major urban area in the US has large immigrant populations from Asia, so part of the Buddhist population is made up of these people. Another part includes people who have converted from other faiths, especially from Judaism and Christianity. What is sometimes controversial, he notes, is that some see themselves as 'practitioners of both their religion of origin and some form of Buddhist tradition'.

But many Catholics, he says, find their faith much enhanced by practices such as meditation - in a survey of Christians in the US who engage in some form of meditation, he says most found their own faith experience 'profoundly deepened' by these practices...

Fr Leo says it was very significant that this meeting is taking place in the year that we mark the 50th anniversary of Nostra Aetate, the document that for the first time described Buddhism and said the Catholic Church "rejects nothing of what is true and holy" in these traditions, "implying there are things we can learn from them."

Source: Vatican Radio

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