The videos of the event
09:30
Climate change, Climate crisis: beyond denialism, the planet has long been crying out its distress, while extreme events that have always and increasingly affected the poorest countries have become ordinary experience even in the richest countries. Drought, hunger, exploitation of the earth, major migrations, pollution, development patterns. The response will either be global or it will be a no-response at all.
Moderator
Isabelle Rosabrunetto
General Director of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation, Principality of Monaco
Relatori
Kpakilé Félémou
Community of Sant’Egidio, Republic of Guinea
Juan Grabois
Founder of the Confederation of Workers of Popular Economy (CTEP), Argentina
Gillian Kingston
Vice President of the World Methodist Council
Michael A. Köhler
Professor, Ambassador of the Grand Bargain, European Union
Sudheendra Kulkarni
Hinduism, Founder of the Forum for a New South Asia, India
David Rosen
Rabbi, Special Advisor to the Abrahamic Family House (AFH) in Abu Dhabi, Israel
09:30
The right to international refugee protection is a great achievement of the UN and the world in the face of persecution and war. In 2022, 93 million human beings are forced refugees, but another 180 million, migrants, live outside their homelands. On top of that there are climate refugees, and the line between economic, environmental, political, and religious refugees is increasingly blurred. But migrants are not only a problem for the world, they can also be a great opportunity: it depends on the policies of reception, recognition, integration
Moderator
Marco Damilano
Editorial writer, Italy
Relatori
Fabio Baggio
Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, Holy See
Slaheddine Jourchi
Journalist and Human Rights activist, Tunisia
Alicia Peressutti
Founder and Director of the Civil Association Vinculos en Red, Argentina
José Alejandro Solalinde Guerra
Director of Hermanos en camino, Mexico
09:30
In a fragmented world, a weak life is most at risk, and defending the lives of those who are most fragile, marginal, can be presented as an unaffordable luxury. But life itself is relationship, we do not give it to ourselves, it contains the other, the need to recognize the other, the unity of humankind, even in times of war, even when entire societies are tempted to turn the extra years of life which have been gained into a problem and a "curse." Every generation is called to find the energies and ways to live with each other and to give dignity to the weak life. There is no lasting peace after conflicts without deep reconciliation and recognition of the other.
Moderator
Mario Marazziti
Journalist and Writer, Community of Sant’Egidio, Italy
Relatori
Grégoire Ahongbonon
Writer, Activist tor the Rights of Vulnerable People, Benin
Donatella Di Cesare
Philosopher; Sapienza Università di Roma, ltaly
Riccardo Di Segni
Chief Rabbi of Rome, Italy
Noorjehan Abdul Majid
Clinical Head for the DREAM Programme in Mozambique
09:30
There are questions within every culture and religious tradition about prayer: What is it for?, What is it?, Who is fit to pray? Prayer, as whatever helps most in life, like air, friendship, love, "goes unseen." Yet it is the greatest resource for change that every generation, for millennia has had at its disposal: a weak force indispensable for finding the ways to peace, which is the very, unifying name of God.
Moderator
Relatori
Frère Alois
Prior of the Community of Taizé, France
Abdulwahhab Ahmed Al-Taha Al-Sammaraee
Spokesman of Fiqh Council of Senior Scholars, Iraq
Ioan
Orthodox Metropolitan, Patriarchate of Romania
16:30
The Fall of the Berlin Wall gave the world hope and accelerated the road to the formation of a united Europe, to a Union as a major world actor of stability and peace. Wars have not disappeared, but they have multiplied, and the war in Ukraine alone threatens to disrupt globalization, cooperation between countries and peoples, and lifestyles in a non-occasional way, bringing its terrible consequences to a large part of the planet but also among Europeans. On the ability to foster dialogue and ways of peace even in times of war depends much of the future of Europe and its role in the world.
Moderator
Relatori
Lucio Caracciolo
Director of "Limes", Italy
Jean-Dominique Durand
Historian, President of the Judeo-Christian Friendship in France
Nico Piro
Journalist, writer and blogger, Italy
Dominique Quinio
Honorary President of "Semaines Sociales", France
Thomas Schwartz
President of Renovabis, Germany
16:30
In times when the world and peoples seem to be losing the taste for unity and where force and war are gaining ground as popular instruments of conflict resolution, all believers and Christians are concerned. Ecumenism and a new language of dialogue among Christians can help heal the world of divisions and foster paths of reconciliation that seem impossible, as they did at the end of World War II. Easter is the foundation of Christian life and the resurrection of the world. A common date for the celebration of Easter today is possible. It has become a necessity.
Moderator
Marco Gnavi
Community of Sant’Egidio, Italy
Relatori
Khajag Barsamian
Orthodox Archbishop, Armenian Apostolic Church
Iosif
Orthodox Metropolitan Bishop, Romanian Patriarchate
Kurt Koch
Cardinal, President of the Dicastery for Promoting Christian Unity, Holy See
Alberto Melloni
John XXIII Foundation for Religious Sciences, Italy
Anba Pola
Orthodos Metropolitan Bishop, Coptic Church of Egypt
16:30
In the Bible, God's Word is Word that creates, that fulfills what it promises and makes to be, it is not removed from history, it is Word-that-makes-history. World history is not linear time, and there are seasons when it is more difficult to see and imagine a future capable of eliminating the sufferings and distortions of the present: "The word of the Lord was rare in those days, visions were not frequent" (I Sam. 3:1). In the Word of God there is also the secret of not flattening on the present and generating future with God's imagination and friendship for every woman and man.
Moderator
Relatori
Abu al-Qasim al-Dibaji
World Pan-lslamic Jurisprudence Organization, Kuwait
Emilce Cuda
Theologian, Secretary of the Pontifical Commission for Latin America, Holy See
Daniele Garrone
President, Federation of Evangelical Churches in ltaly
José Tolentino Mendonça
Cardinal, Prefect of the Dicastery for Culture and Education, Holy See
Jong Chun Park
President of the World Methodist Council (WMC), South Korea
16:30
Religions have been used in so many ages and even recently to wage war and make war with one another better, this has hollowed them out, made them caricatures. They used religious words for hatred and for the elimination of the other. This happens in precise places in the world, as well as in the hearts of so many people. But religions can be, when they enter into the depths of themselves, water to extinguish the fires of divisions and distortions that prevent us from seeing in others our brothers and sisters and fellow human beings. In a time of pushes for political, ethnic and social divisions, of the resurgence of aggressive nationalisms, religions can help to rediscover what unites rather than what divides: a new responsibility for peace.
Moderator
Vittorio Ianari
Community of Sant’Egidio, Italy
Relatori
Mohamed Abdelsalam Abdellatif
Secretary-General of the Muslim Council of Elders, Egypt
Zaid Mohammed Bahr AL-Uloom
Director of the Al-Khoei Institute, Iraq
Indunil J. Kodithuwakku
Secretary, Dicastery for lnterreligious Dialogue, Holy See
Ryoko Nishioka
Advisor to the Patriarch of Tendai Buddhism, Japan
Laurent Ulrich
Archbishop of Paris, France
16:30
At the height of the Cold War and the rebirth of many of the world's countries after World War II, 17 years after the bombs of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, at the height of decolonization that progressively emancipated Africa from centuries of European colonialism, the "Cuban crisis" confronted the world with the real risk of nuclear war and self-destruction. The protagonists had the names of Nikita Kruschev, John F. Kennedy, and Pope John XXIII. The risks implicit in an escalation that must answer to one's public opinions and apparatuses rather than to the supreme good of security and peace for all, the possibility of a "nuclear accident" capable of triggering a chain reaction, 60 years later, acquire dramatic relevance and a lesson for the present.