Pravda Ru
President Putin meets religious leaders to counter terrorism
10/20/2004 12:56
Nine religious leaders, including Pastor Vasily Stolyar, Seventh-day
Adventist Church president for West Russia, were part of a September 29
summit meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in which the state
leader called on pastors to help stop terrorist activities by promoting
tolerance and understanding.
The meeting, held in the Kremlin's famed "Catherine's Hall," was the first
involving religious leaders with President Putin in three years, Pastor
Stolyar noted.
"Your words and actions are extremely important in the current situation,
when the criminals are trying to direct anger at the people of another faith
and ethnicity," Putin told the delegates. "I would like to stress that a
major aim of the unprecedented series of terrorist attacks ... was to drive
a wedge between the Muslim world and representatives of other faiths," the
president added.
President Putin "expressed the desire to cooperate with religious leaders
and he sincerely hopes they can help in the consolidation of civil society.
He said he considers spiritual mentorship and preaching of the high moral
guidelines very important, and that the best economic reforms and the best
political aims could not be reached without education in spirituality,"
Stolyar said.
Stolyar also noted that Russian Orthodox Church leader, Patriarch Alexey II,
said "the main confessions of Russia were represented" in the meting, which
offers a tacit recognition of the Protestant churches as well.
Other church leaders attending included Metropolitan Andrian of the Orthodox
Old Believers Church; Pandito Hambo Lama, the 25th, Damba Ayusheyev of the
Buddhist community; Bishop Ezras of the Armenian Apostolic Church; Ravil
Gainutdin of the Islamic Council of Mufti; Metropolit Archbishop Tadeusz
Kondrusiewicz, head of the Roman Catholic Church in Russia; Rabbi Berl
Lazar, Chief Rabbi of Russia; and Bishop Sergei Ryakhovsky, Chairman of the
Russian Pentecostal Union.
APD
President Putin meets religious leaders to counter terrorism
10/20/2004 12:56
Nine religious leaders, including Pastor Vasily Stolyar, Seventh-day
Adventist Church president for West Russia, were part of a September 29
summit meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in which the state
leader called on pastors to help stop terrorist activities by promoting
tolerance and understanding.
The meeting, held in the Kremlin's famed "Catherine's Hall," was the first
involving religious leaders with President Putin in three years, Pastor
Stolyar noted.
"Your words and actions are extremely important in the current situation,
when the criminals are trying to direct anger at the people of another faith
and ethnicity," Putin told the delegates. "I would like to stress that a
major aim of the unprecedented series of terrorist attacks ... was to drive
a wedge between the Muslim world and representatives of other faiths," the
president added.
President Putin "expressed the desire to cooperate with religious leaders
and he sincerely hopes they can help in the consolidation of civil society.
He said he considers spiritual mentorship and preaching of the high moral
guidelines very important, and that the best economic reforms and the best
political aims could not be reached without education in spirituality,"
Stolyar said.
Stolyar also noted that Russian Orthodox Church leader, Patriarch Alexey II,
said "the main confessions of Russia were represented" in the meting, which
offers a tacit recognition of the Protestant churches as well.
Other church leaders attending included Metropolitan Andrian of the Orthodox
Old Believers Church; Pandito Hambo Lama, the 25th, Damba Ayusheyev of the
Buddhist community; Bishop Ezras of the Armenian Apostolic Church; Ravil
Gainutdin of the Islamic Council of Mufti; Metropolit Archbishop Tadeusz
Kondrusiewicz, head of the Roman Catholic Church in Russia; Rabbi Berl
Lazar, Chief Rabbi of Russia; and Bishop Sergei Ryakhovsky, Chairman of the
Russian Pentecostal Union.
APD