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Parliamentary Diplomacy and Inclusive Interfaith Dialogue in Nigeria

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By Leo Igwe

The Inter-Parliamentary Union will hold its second conference on interfaith dialogue in Rome in June. It is pertinent to reflect on the significance of interfaith conversations, communications, and cooperation. In particular, I ask: can parliamentary diplomacy help further interreligious dialogue in Nigeria? Nigeria is religiously pluralistic, and religious attacks and sectarian violence often take place. Faith-based abuses are rampant. IPU is a global organization of national parliaments. It empowers parliamentarians to promote peace, democracy, and sustainable development. Parliamentarians are key stakeholders in statecraft and can utilize their positions to foster inclusive dialogue and promote effective governance.

Unfortunately, parliamentary diplomacy has not robustly been deployed to further inclusive interfaith dialogue. Interreligious dialogue in Nigeria is anything but inclusive. The exercise has exclusively been a “Chrislamic” affair, that is, a dialogue between Christians and Muslims. That should not be the case because millions of Nigerians do not profess Christianity and Islam. Leaders of other religions and belief groups deserve seats and slots at the table of interfaith dialogue in Nigeria. At the moment, Christian and Muslim actors constitute the Nigeria Interreligious Council (NIREC), excluding traditional religious groups, and atheist and humanist belief constituencies in the country. This situation must change if Nigeria must rise to the challenge of realizing an inclusive interfaith dialogue. 

In the past couple of years, I have invested in promoting understanding, and positive and cooperative interactions between people of different religions and beliefs. I have called for a more inclusive interfaith dialogue, especially the inclusion and representation of other faith and belief communities in NIREC. These appeals have fallen on deaf ears. But I have not given up.

In furtherance of interfaith/belief harmony, understanding, and cooperation, I organized with James Wuye and Imam Ashafa of the Interfaith Mediation Center in Kaduna the first interfaith/belief dialogue between people of different religions and beliefs in Nigeria in 2021. For the first time, believers and nonbelievers met in the same room, sat side by side, and discussed issues of common interest. Parliamentarian diplomacy can be a resource in this respect. It can facilitate a more inclusive interfaith dialogue in Nigeria. 

Meanwhile, the king of Morocco has called for the evolution of interreligious dialogue. The king acknowledged that the dialogue between Abrahamic religions was out of step with the times, and the religious and belief realities of the 21st century. As the king rightly pointed out, the paradigm of life and living is shifting and changing, so must interfaith relations and, yes interfaith dialogue. In Nigeria, interreligious dialogue needs to evolve. NIREC needs to be inclusive. NIREC has existed for many years, and interfaith dialogue has been going on for some time. Still, the goals of this dialogue are far from achieved. 

Hence, for this year’s conference, IPU urges a strengthening of trust in interfaith relations, an embrace of hope for a common future.

To realize this goal, parliamentarians should take measures to remove all obstacles to free exercise of freedom of religion or belief. There cannot be a robust interfaith relation in a situation where people cannot fully exercise their right to believe or not believe. There cannot be a meaningful dialogue where individuals cannot profess, change, express in public or private their religious belief or nonbelief. In Muslim-dominated areas, sharia is enforced. Mistrust of other faith and belief communities is entrenched. While non-muslims can embrace Islam, convert, and become Muslims. Muslims are forbidden to renounce the faith. Apostasy is considered a dishonor to the religion and the Ummah, and an offence against the ‘state’. Open and public dissent or criticism is easily designated as blasphemy which is a crime punishable by death. Extrajudicial attacks and murder of alleged blasphemers take place with impunity. 

Perpetrators like those who murdered Yohanna Shuaibu in Kano in 2021 and Deborah Samuel in Sokoto in 2022 are never brought to justice. Parliamentary diplomacy can address these missing links and other forces that weaken trust in interfaith relations.

Parliamentarians should facilitate inclusive interfaith dialogue and guarantee equality, dignity, and non-discrimination for persons from faith or no faith traditions.

Leo Igwe is a humanist, and sent this piece from Ibadan

Leo Igwe

Leo Igwe (born July 26, 1970) is a Nigerian human rights advocate and humanist. Igwe is a former Western and Southern African representative of the International Humanist and Ethical Union, and has specialized in campaigning against and documenting the impacts of child witchcraft accusations. He holds a Ph.D from the Bayreuth International School of African Studies at the University of Bayreuth in Germany, having earned a graduate degree in Philosophy from the University of Calabar in Nigeria. Igwe’s human rights advocacy has brought him into conflict with high-profile witchcraft believers, such as Liberty Foundation Gospel Ministries, because of his criticism of what he describes as their role in the violence and child abandonment that sometimes result from accusations of witchcraft. His human rights fieldwork has led to his arrest on several occasions in Nigeria. Igwe has held leadership roles in the Nigerian Humanist Movement, Atheist Alliance International, and the Center For Inquiry—Nigeria. In 2012, Igwe was appointed as a Research Fellow of the James Randi Educational Foundation, where he continues working toward the goal of responding to what he sees as the deleterious effects of superstition, advancing skepticism throughout Africa and around the world. In 2014, Igwe was chosen as a laureate of the International Academy of Humanism and in 2017 received the Distinguished Services to Humanism Award from the International Humanist and Ethical Union. Igwe was raised in southeastern Nigeria, and describes his household as being strictly Catholic in the midst of a “highly superstitious community,” according to an interview in the Gold Coast Bulletin.[1] At age twelve, Igwe entered the seminary, beginning to study for the Catholic priesthood, but later was confused by conflicting beliefs between Christian theology and the beliefs in witches and wizards that are “entrenched in Nigerian society.”[1] After a period of research and internal conflict due to doubts about the “odd blend of tribalism and fundamentalist Christianity he believes is stunting African development,” a 24-year-old Igwe resigned from the seminary and relocated to Ibadan, Nigeria