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Politics : Clinton -- doomed & wagging, Japan collapses, Y2K bug, etc

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To: alan w who wrote (521)10/2/1998 2:52:00 PM
From: SOROS   of 1151
 
CAMBRIDGE, MASS.

In 1992, scientists from 70 countries issued a warning: Earth's environment is in such a grave state it demands the urgent attention
of religious leaders as well as politicians, scientists, and educators. That call, says Mary Evelyn Tucker - associate professor of
religion at Bucknell University in Lewisburg, Pa. - helped galvanize a three-year exploration of world faiths and their views on the
natural world that will conclude later this month at the United Nations.

Past UN environment conferences revealed the need for a shared ethic, and an Earth Charter is being drafted. The series of
conferences coordinated by Dr. Tucker and her husband, John Grim, seeks common ground among faiths and other disciplines for
altering our worldviews and lifestyles. An academic discipline is being developed combining religion and ecology.

The environmental crisis "is also a moral and spiritual crisis," Tucker says, and with this effort, "we are creating new modes of being
religious in the contemporary world."

Since May 1996, conferences have been held on ecology and Judaism, Christianity, Islam, indigenous traditions, Hinduism,
Buddhism, Taoism, Confucianism, Shintoism, and Jainism.

The recent interdisciplinary gathering at the American Academy of Arts and Sciences here explored the relation of religious values
to environmental education, science, economics, and public policy. On Oct. 20 and 21, culminating sessions about faiths and the
environment will be held at the UN and the American Museum of Natural History in New York. The aim is to spur new alliances for
transforming values and practices, "reinventing industrial society on a sustainable basis."

The URL for this page is: csmonitor.com
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