DOHA,
November 29 (IslamOnline.net) – The Doha International Conference
for the Family commenced Monday, November 29, with a call for
establishing a global research and studies center to protect the
family’s social structure and fabric.
“All
peoples should stand firmly in the face of destructive calls targeting
the unity and concept of family, which contradict the three
monotheistic religions and the conscience of humankind,” Sheikha
Mozah bint Nasser Al-Misnad, consort of the Qatari emir, said in her
inaugural speech.
She
said the proposed international pro-family research center will lay
the ground work for family sciences in the third millennium.
“Calls
of modernity can not be taken as a pretext to twist religious,
cultural and social values, which protect the family’s fabric,”
she told an attentive audience.
“There
is no common denominator better able to bridge the gap between the
different peoples of the world, despite conflicts and diversity, than
the firm belief in the sacredness of the family.”
Sheikha
Mozah noted that the proposed research center would table useful
pro-family initiatives and coordinate between regional and United
Nations family programs by drawing up studies and organizing seminars.
“It
will provide the much-needed logistic support for the concept of
family.”
State
Role
Sheikha
Mozah, also President of Qatar’s Supreme Council for Family Affairs,
further urged governments worldwide to thrash out all legal,
political, economic and social obstacles to the message of the family.
“Eradicating
poverty and illiteracy is not enough to protect the family from
disintegration,” she said.
“It,
nevertheless, makes a strategic tool out of the family for development
and reconstruction.”
UN
Secretary General Kofi Anan, through his representative, said
governments, the civil society, enterprises and the United Nations
should “reaffirm global commitment to the families.”
Professor
Richard G. Wilkins, Managing Directory of World Family Policy Center,
noted that the year-long preparation for this conference, which has
involved many people from many nations and cultures, demonstrates that
a clash of civilizations is not inevitable.
“We
are all united by shared understandings of family,” he said.
In
a similar vein, Arab League Secretary General Amr Mousa said that the
conference is held in a troubled climate for the Arab world, but also
a hopeful climate.
Pro-Family
Directory
IslamOnline.net,
which is taking part in the conference, has launched
is
a free networking service to facilitate communication between
individuals and institutions involved in pro-family activities.
It
allows visitors to register their personal information, add documents,
whether issued by themselves or their organizations, search the
directory to find pro-family organizations and/or activists both in
English and in Arabic, browse the list of registered organizations and
activists and browse the documents of other active institutions both
in English and in Arabic.
Held
under the patronage of the Qatari First Lady, the two-day
international conference brings together 150 world dignitaries and
pro-family NGOs.
Chief
among them are former Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohammad,
Sheikh Yusuf Al-Qaradawi, President of the International Association
of Muslim Scholars (IAMS), Pope Shenouda III of Alexandria, the
president of the World Council for Churches, and Gary S. Becker, 1992
Nobel Laureate in economics.
The
conference seeks solutions to problems of families such as poverty,
tension between traditional values and new values, challenges to
parental authority and increased divorce rates.
It
is the culmination of a series of regional conferences, cross-cultural
dialogues, and local meetings that have been taking place this year in
celebration of the 10th anniversary of the first International Year of
the Family.
The
conference will conclude by adopting the Doha Declaration which will
emphasize the importance of restating the family and will call upon
governments to be committed to promote the role of family and to
protect it as a fundamental unit of which society is made.
Many
of the issues important to the family will be debated next year at a
huge UN conference that is commonly known as Beijing +10.