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The '''Declaration of Religious Harmony''' of [[Singapore]] is a statement that affirms the importance of, and the commitment of Singaporeans towards, religious harmony. It is a basis for Singaporeans to reflect on religious harmony, and what should be done to achieve it.
The '''Declaration of Religious Harmony''' of [[Singapore]] is a statement that affirms the importance of, and the commitment of Singaporeans towards, religious harmony. It is a basis for Singaporeans to reflect on religious harmony, and what should be done to achieve it. I am at the library showing people how to edit Wikipedia.


The idea of having a Code on Religious Harmony was proposed by the then [[Prime Minister of Singapore|Prime Minister]] (now [[Senior Minister]]) [[Goh Chok Tong]] in [[September 2002|September]]<ref>[http://www.iccc.org.sg/rhwcommittee.html Explanation of the Declaration by the Religious Harmony Working Committee on the website of the International Council of Christian Churches].</ref> or [[October 2002]].<ref>"[http://archive.rsi.com.sg/en/programmes/newsline/2003/06/10_06_01.htm Declaration of Religious Harmony Becomes Part of Singapore Life]" ([[10 June]] [[2003]]), an interview of Eugene Tan, lecturer in law at the Singapore Management University, by Felix Tan on the website of [[Radio Singapore International]].</ref> This followed strains in racial harmony in the country following the [[September 11, 2001 attacks]] in the [[United States|United States of America]] and the [[arrest]] and [[preventive detention|detention]] of members of the [[Jemaah Islamiyah]] [[terrorism|terrorist]] network in Singapore in [[December 2001]].
The idea of having a Code on Religious Harmony was proposed by the then [[Prime Minister of Singapore|Prime Minister]] (now [[Senior Minister]]) [[Goh Chok Tong]] in [[September 2002|September]]<ref>[http://www.iccc.org.sg/rhwcommittee.html Explanation of the Declaration by the Religious Harmony Working Committee on the website of the International Council of Christian Churches].</ref> or [[October 2002]].<ref>"[http://archive.rsi.com.sg/en/programmes/newsline/2003/06/10_06_01.htm Declaration of Religious Harmony Becomes Part of Singapore Life]" ([[10 June]] [[2003]]), an interview of Eugene Tan, lecturer in law at the Singapore Management University, by Felix Tan on the website of [[Radio Singapore International]].</ref> This followed strains in racial harmony in the country following the [[September 11, 2001 attacks]] in the [[United States|United States of America]] and the [[arrest]] and [[preventive detention|detention]] of members of the [[Jemaah Islamiyah]] [[terrorism|terrorist]] network in Singapore in [[December 2001]].

Revision as of 15:26, 17 September 2008

The Declaration of Religious Harmony of Singapore is a statement that affirms the importance of, and the commitment of Singaporeans towards, religious harmony. It is a basis for Singaporeans to reflect on religious harmony, and what should be done to achieve it. I am at the library showing people how to edit Wikipedia.

The idea of having a Code on Religious Harmony was proposed by the then Prime Minister (now Senior Minister) Goh Chok Tong in September[1] or October 2002.[2] This followed strains in racial harmony in the country following the September 11, 2001 attacks in the United States of America and the arrest and detention of members of the Jemaah Islamiyah terrorist network in Singapore in December 2001.

The Declaration was issued in 2003 by a working committee chaired by Minister of State Chan Soo Sen and involving the national bodies of all mainstream religious groups in Singapore, after six months of intense debate over its wording.

Subsequently, an Inter-Religious Harmony Circle (IRHC) comprising representatives of the religious groups involved in the working committee was formed to promote the Declaration. The IRHC has encouraged Singaporeans to recite the Declaration during the week when Racial Harmony Day (21 July) is marked every year.

Text of the Declaration

We, the people in Singapore, declare that religious harmony is vital for peace, progress and prosperity in our multi-racial and multi-religious Nation.
We resolve to strengthen religious harmony through mutual tolerance, confidence, respect, and understanding.
We shall always
Recognise the secular nature of our State,
Promote cohesion within our society,
Respect each other's freedom of religion,
Grow our common space while respecting our diversity,
Foster inter-religious communications,
and thereby ensure that religion will not be abused to create conflict and disharmony in Singapore.

Notes

See also

External links