Alliance of civilizations: World leaders meet at UN to promote common humanity
“We have to provide them, the young people, with education and jobs,” the Deputy Secretary-General said. But even more, we have to provide young people with an understanding of our common humanity, our common destiny – in fact, our common survival.”
He went on to say “if you start to divide people into us and them, you put a stamp of quality on yourself vis-à-vis others. In the ‘us-and-them’ syndrome, the ‘us’ is practically always qualitatively higher than the ‘them’. And then you build up biases which can lead to horrible things, as we’ve seen far too often.”
Saying that “the majority of the world’s citizens are far from extreme,” he said, “we must try to reach out to young people. We need to amplify these voices of these moderate forces, both Muslim, Christian, Buddhist, Hindu, Jewish and other faith communities.”
Eliasson reminded the meeting that “two days ago, at the General Assembly, the Secretary-General spoke out against the rise of divisive politics, as you may recall. He made the point that people are very good at seeing prejudice in others – but they are not so good at seeing their own bias.”
Nassir Abdulaziz Al-Nasser, the High Representative of the Alliance of Civilizations, launched in 2005 through the initiative, of Spain and Turkey under the auspices of the UN to seek better cross-cultural relations worldwide, told the meeting: “We need to unite and reject any suggestion of a clash of civilizations.”
“Belief in permanent religious war is the misguided refuge of extremists who cannot build or create anything, and therefore peddle only fanaticism and hate,” he said. “And it is no exaggeration to say that humanity's future depends on us uniting against those who would divide us along fault lines of tribe or sect; race or religion.”
The High Representative said he will ensure that the concrete suggestions from the meeting on Friday will be built upon through consultations to make them a reality.
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