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Workshop

4. Shifting gears - making a transition from informal inter faith grouping to representative council

 

Facilitator: Rt Revd Michael Bourke, Bishop of Wolverhampton
Reporter back: Dan Hawthorn
Minuter: Chris Hewer

 

Opening contributions: Jaswant Singh Heera and Ruth Tetlow of the Birmingham Council of Faiths described the development of inter faith structures in Birmingham. In the past there had been a Birmingham Inter Faith Council and a Birmingham Fellowship of Faiths. The Inter Faith Council had developed into the Birmingham Council of Faiths and this was now looking to develop a relationship with the City Council and other public bodies in the Birmingham area. Daphne Beale and Gous Ali of the Loughborough Council of Faiths described the development in Loughborough of the new formal Council of Faiths alongside the Loughborough Inter Faith Group which had existed for some years and continued after the formation of the Council, with the roles of the two bodies being complementary. In the course of these presentations and in the following discussion, the following key points emerged:

  • If there is to be a development from an informal to a formal structure for inter faith representation, then it is important that there should be a natural progression based on the people and relationships already in place. A development worker in the pay of a local authority might be an important resource for taking such a transition forward.
  • A local authority might be an appropriate body to initiate such a project because of its impartiality and the neutral ground it can offer. It does avoid some of the issues around such projects being seen to be led rather over much by the Christian Churches. So long as they are not pressing their own agenda too hard, there is certainly a role for the local authority there, even though not yet a clear one.
  • Local authorities are custodians of power in an area. To enable a council of faiths to be seen as having something to deliver within the local society, there needs to be a willingness on the part of the local authority to let it have some power (for example allowing it some say in financial disbursement in relevant contexts and letting it have an authoritative voice on certain questions).
  • There is a clear difference between moral support offered by a local authority to a council of faiths and financial support. Sometimes the former may be all that is sought but at other times, financial support may be appropriate and important.
  • "Representation" is not a straightforward matter. The rationale behind the pattern of membership needs to be carefully thought out. How are the representatives chosen to represent their constituencies? There might be different forms of representation within different communities. It is important to ask to whom representatives are representing their communities and how information is channelled through them in both directions. To what extent are the points of view expressed by representatives really representative? To what extent must representatives demonstrate accountability to their communities?
  • There are arguments against representation on a council of faiths being specifically in proportion to the numbers of a particular faith in the local community. Attention needs to be paid to the representation of minorities within faith communities.
  • How is adequate representation of women’s voices and opinions to be ensured?

 

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