On the 18 of March, an inter-faith event at the Salvation Army’s International Headquarters in London brought together Christians, Jews, Muslims and others to consider how the three major faiths approach to refugees.
The event included an exhibition and a scriptural reasoning part – organised by the Cambridge Inter-faith Programme – which is a process that encourages Jews, Christians and Muslims to read passages from their respective sacred texts. Together they discuss the content of those texts, with the goal being not agreement but rather the understanding of one another’s traditions and deeper exploration of the texts and their possible interpretations.
Selected fragments were read from the Jewish Tanakh and the Muslim Qur’an, between which Commissioner William Cochrane (International Secretary to the Chief of the Staff) introduced a portion of the New Testament and spoke about the Christian approach to the plight of the refugee and the significance of the crucifixion of Christ. The texts were then discussed in groups of around 10 people.
The event also included the art project “The Stations of the Cross”, with the public interview of the artist Güler Ates – whose artwork ‘Sea of Colour’ hangs inside the front window of IHQ. She revealed the inspiration behind her work and explained how she had linked the current refugee crisis in Europe with the station of the Cross at which Jesus is stripped of his garments.
‘Sea of Colour’ is one of 14 artworks at a variety of locations across central London that form a modern-day ‘pilgrimage for art lovers’, progressing through the traditional stations of the Cross that mark the stages of Jesus’ journey to Calvary. The 13 other iconic locations include St Paul’s Cathedral, Westminster Cathedral, the Tower of London and the National Gallery.