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and concomitant human rights abuses. Intrareligious and interreligious
communication must play a crucial role in this continuous endeavour.
26. Unfortunately, we sometimes witness the outbreak of violence despite existing
inter-group communication, including interreligious communication. The most
notorious examples are civil wars in which former neighbours, who used to live
peacefully side by side over many years, attack one another violently. Not
infrequently, such violence occurs under the auspices of ascribed or actual religious
differences. Ample evidence indicates that communication per se does not provide a
guarantee for peaceful coexistence between different groups of people. Yet it would
be dangerous to use this disturbing observation as an argument for downplaying the
significance of communication. Rather, what is needed are effective policies for
improving the conditions for a sustainable culture of communication.
27. Research in social psychology has confirmed that communication is generally
conducive to peaceful, non-violent relations, provided the following conditions are
met: (a) people, or groups of individuals, encounter each other on an equal footing;
(b) communication has a long-term perspective (i.e., it goes beyond mere superficial
brief encounters); (c) elements of common interest are identified and clarified;
(d) there is encouragement from society at large, including from political
authorities, in the sense of a general appreciation of inter-group communication.
28. Human rights, in particular the rights to freedom of thought, conscience,
religion, opinion and expression and the principle of non-discrimination, can help to
bring about circumstances of improved communication, which, in turn, enhance the
general prospects for the practical enjoyment of human rights by all. The Special
Rapporteur would like to reiterate a quote from Boutros Boutros-Ghali, the former
Secretary-General: “Human rights, when viewed from a universal perspective, force
us to face the most demanding of all dialectics: the dialectics of identity and
otherness, of ‘self’ and ‘other’. They teach us, in the most direct way, that we are, at
one and the same time, the same and different” (see E/CN.4/2003/66, para. 119).
29. Many interlocutors with expertise in the field of interreligious dialogue have
expressed to the Special Rapporteur their experience-based conviction that regular
encounters between individuals and groups, if conducted on an equal footing and
with a long-term perspective, foster a better mutual understanding across religious
divides. At the same time, it is important to be aware of possible frustrations which
participants in dialogue projects might experience. It can happen that, as a result of
serious attempts at getting to know one another, people may feel they are further
apart than they had previously thought. And yet it would be wrong to contend that
communication in such cases has been useless or even an outright failure. On the
contrary, however frustrating the experience of limits of mutual understanding may
be, a concrete lack of understanding is still generally better than an abstract lack of
understanding, as an abstract lack of understanding, in the sense of ascribing
complete “otherness” to a person or group typically renders groups of people
vulnerable to uninhibited and dangerous negative projections, including conspiracy
theories and scapegoating communications in which participants experience the
limits of mutual understanding are clearly preferable to an attitude of refusing
communication in general. This clarification is intended to encourage people to
continue dialogue projects even in the face of frustrating experiences that may at
times occur.
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