Wednesday, July 25, 2018

State Department Hosts First-Ever Ministerial To Advance Religious Freedom

Yesterday was the first day of the U.S. State Department's 3-day Ministerial to Advance Religious FreedomRNS reports that U.S. Ambassador-at-Large for International Religious Freedom Sam Brownback opened the Ministerial at the State Department, urging the 350 conference participants from 80 countries to work together to advance religious freedom. The faiths represented at the State Department conference include Muslims, Jews, Christians, Buddhists, Hindus, Sikhs, Baha’is, and Yazidis.  The State Department describes the agenda of this first-ever Ministerial:
On July 24, we will equip and empower civil society organizations, including organizations working on religious freedom, to understand better how to access U.S. financial support for their efforts...
On July 25, members of civil society groups, including religious leaders and survivors of religious persecution, will convene to tell their stories, share their expertise, and ultimately unite on a path to greater religious freedom in our societies....
On July 26, government and international organization representatives will participate in plenary sessions focused on: (1) identifying global challenges to religious freedom, (2) developing innovative responses to persecution on the basis of religion, and (3) sharing new commitments to protect religious freedom for all.....
Here is the full schedule of panels. Various side events are also scheduled.

UPDATE: As reported by Blog from the Capital, the Summit ended with the Potomac Declaration and a Plan of Action. Critics contend that the Summit accomplished little.