The Board of Trustees of the Council for the Parliament of the Worlds Religions (CPWR) has selected Melbourne, Australia as the preferred city
to host the 2009 Parliament of the Worlds Religions (PWR) event, one
of the worlds largest multi-faith gatherings.
Sandra Chipchase, CEO, Melbourne Convention + Visitors Bureau (MCVB) said that the selection of Melbourne is subject to the completion of
the financial plan, the final stage of the bid process.
We are delighted that the CPWR Board has chosen Melbourne as its preferred city to host this important multi-faith event, Ms Chipchase said.
The Bureau has worked closely with the City of Melbourne, the Victorian State Government and Federal Government to secure this major event
for Victoria. Melbourne will now secure private sector support to add to the financial commitments from governments in order to deliver the
event.
The PWR is expected to bring 10,000 visitors to Melbourne and inject more than
A$75 million into the Victorian economy. It will run for 8 days during early December 2009 and will include more than 400 programs and performances relating to spiritual practice, religious identity, and intra
and inter-religious dialogue.
First held in Chicago in 1893, the PWR brings together the worlds religious and spiritual leaders and their followers to attend a series of
conferences, congresses and debates where peace, diversity and sustainability is discussed and explored. It is run the CPWR, a US based
interreligious organisation that cultivates harmony between the worlds religious and spiritual communities, fosters their engagement with the
world to achieve a vision of a peaceful, just and sustainable world.
The Reverend Dirk Ficca, executive director of the CPWR said that Melbourne could expect to receive worldwide attention during PWR 2009.
In todays world, there is a clear need for interfaith understanding, cooperation and for conflict mitigation of religiously inspired violence and
terrorism, said Reverend Ficca. Recent world events highlight the need to support religious moderation in the defusing of religious extremism.
Without peace between the religions, there cannot be peace in the world.
The head of Melbournes winning bid committee and Australias representative on the World Conference of Religions for Peace, RMITs
Professor Des Cahill, said religion and spirituality is now at the centre stage in Australian and across the world.
It is a credit to its multicultural and interfaith climate that the worlds religious leaders and their faith communities have chosen Melbourne for
such an important event. It is like winning the Olympic Games of religion and spirituality, he added.
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