|
News
Myanmar:
Religious Liberty Affirmed as Christian Leaders Meet
Rangoon, Myanmar ....
For the first
time since the once open nation of Burma entered a phase of martial law,
renamed itself Myanmar, and turned away from significant contact with
the world community, a conference of more than 40 leaders of the Christian
community was held in Myanmar Feb. 10 in Rangoon to express commitment
to religious freedom and Christian solidarity.
The meeting was propelled
by the visit of John Graz, secretary-general of the Conference of Secretaries
of the Christian World Communions and secretary-general of the International
Religious Liberty Association (IRLA); Lincoln Steed, editor of Liberty
Magazine; and Dr. Hiskiah Missah, regional IRLA director, based in the
Philippines.
The Myanmar Council
of Churches (MCC), the umbrella group most recognized by the government,
called the meeting and invited several Christian groups not normally associated
with the MCC.
Myanmar is a predominantly
Buddhist country, with just 6 percent Christians in a population of 52
million. Community resistance and government suspicion bring difficulties
for Christian witness.
Smith N. Za Thawng,
general secretary of the MCC, and Saw Mar Gay Gyi, president of the MCC
and general secretary for the Bible Society in Myanmar, welcomed overseas
guests and Christian delegations from the Catholic Bishops Conference
of Myanmar, the Myanmar Evangelical Christian Fellowship, the Church of
the Brethren, Myanmar Baptist Convention, the Methodist Church, the Seventh-day
Adventist Church, the Presbyterian Church of Myanmar and other groups.
The group discussed
ways to maximize Christian cooperation in Myanmar.
"This is an important
time," said Thawng, "because in a few days Myanmar is beginning
the process of developing a new constitution."
While the government
has in the past appropriated church property and continues to restrict
some church activities, most attendees see hope in recent developments.
"Yes, there is a slight bias against Christian and Western influence,
" said Tin Maung Tun, head of the Church of the Brethren, "but
that is changing." He sees developing respect and an awareness that
"we are Christians on a national level."
Leaders told of many
cases of individual community leaders and government officials facilitating
Christian activity -- and while some Buddhist priests have been hostile,
others have opened their communities to them.
MCC leadership expressed
thanks to the Adventist Church and Kenneth Htang Suanzanang, Public Affairs
and Religious Liberty director for the church in Myanmar, for working
with them to make the historic gathering possible. The group committed
to holding more such consultations.
The IRLA was founded
in 1893 by Adventist church leaders and has developed into a non-sectarian
organization dedicated to safeguarding religious civil rights around the
world. [IRLA/ANN Staff]
TOP
|