A/HRC/40/58
“Ye are the fruits of one tree, and the leaves of one branch.” (Bahá’u’lláh)
.
We believe that freedom of religion or belief does not exist without the freedom of
thought and conscience which precede all freedoms for they are linked to human essence
and his/her rights of choice and to freedom of religion or belief. A person as a whole is the
basis of every faith and he/she grows through love, forgiveness and respect.
6.
We hereby solemnly launch together from Beirut the most noble of all struggles,
peaceful but powerful, against our own egos, self-interest and artificial divides. Only when
we as religious actors assume our respective roles, articulate a shared vision of our
responsibilities and transcend preaching to action, only then we will credibly promote mutual
acceptance and fraternity among people of different religions or beliefs and empower them
to defeat negative impulses of hatred, viciousness, manipulation, greed, cruelty and related
forms of inhumanity. All religious or belief communities need a resolved leadership that
unequivocally dresses that path by acting for equal dignity of everyone, driven by our shared
humanity and respect for the absolute freedom of conscience of every human being. We
pledge to spare no effort in filling that joint leadership gap by protecting freedom and
diversity through “faith for rights” (F4R) activities.
“We perfected each soul within its built in weakness for wrong doing and its aspiration for
what is right. Succeeds he or she who elevate to the path of rightness.” (Qu’ran 91, 7-9)
7.
The present declaration on “Faith for Rights” reaches out to persons belonging to
religions and beliefs in all regions of the world, with a view to enhancing cohesive,
peaceful and respectful societies on the basis of a common action-oriented platform agreed
by all concerned and open to all actors that share its objectives. We value that our declaration
on Faith for Rights, like its founding precedent the Rabat Plan of Action on incitement to
discrimination, hostility or violence (October 2012), were both conceived and conducted
under the auspices and with the support of the United Nations that represents all peoples of
the world, and enriched by UN human rights mechanisms such as Special Rapporteurs and
Treaty Body members.
8.
While numerous welcomed initiatives attempted over time to link faith with rights for
the benefit of both, none of these attempts fully reached that goal. We are therefore convinced
that religious actors should be enabled, both nationally and internationally, to assume their
responsibilities in defending our shared humanity against incitement to hatred, those who
benefit from destabilising societies and the manipulators of fear to the detriment of equal and
inalienable human dignity. With the present F4R Declaration, we aim to join hands and hearts
in building on previous attempts to bring closer faith and rights by articulating the common
grounds between all of us and define ways in which faith can stand for rights more
effectively so that both enhance each other.
“Mankind is at loss. Except those who believe in doing righteous deeds, constantly
recommend it to one another and persist in that vein.” (Qu’ran 103, 2-3)
9.
Building on the present declaration, we also intend to practice what we preach
through establishing a multi-level coalition, open for all independent religious actors and
faith-based organisations who genuinely demonstrate acceptance of and commitment to the
present F4R declaration by implementing projects on the ground in areas that contribute to
achieving its purpose. We will also be charting a roadmap for concrete actions in specific
areas, to be reviewed regularly by our global coalition of Faith for Rights.
10.
To achieve the above goal, we pledge as believers (whether theistic, non-theistic,
atheistic or other3) to fully adhere to five fundamental principles:
(a) Transcending traditional inter-faith dialogues into concrete action-oriented Faith for
Rights (F4R) projects at the local level. While dialogue is important, it is not an end in
itself. Good intentions are of limited value without corresponding action. Change on the
ground is the goal and concerted action is its logical means.
“Faith is grounded in the heart when it is demonstrated by deeds.” (Hadith)
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