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Ecumenical Forum of European Christian Women

 

What will our common future look like?

 

A summer school organised by European Christian women

concerned about sustainable living

Svaty Jur, Slovakia, August 2003

 

This was the second summer school of its kind:  the first was held in Svaty Jur in 2000 with the theme Living Better with Less.  Thirty participants came from 10 European countries - East Central and West - and a spread of Orthodox, Catholic and Protestant churches, in order to reflect on the future of the continent we all belong to, and how it can relate to the countries of the Third World.  The starting points were the major concerns and preoccupations each of us brought from her/his own country.

 

In presentations, discussions and workshop sessions, we faced each other with a wide range of questions around four main thematic areas:

 

·        Sustainability in a globalised world

·        Human relationships and medical ethics

·        Social justice

·        The Ecumenical Movement

 

The question of sustainability was a thread running through all our discussions.

Alongside care in handling the environment were the concerns about care in our relationships with one another.

Some conflicts are of course all too familiar, still awaiting a genuine and just solution.

Our fourth theme was the ecumenical movement.

These and other ecumenical concerns formed the essential background to our entire meeting, not least in the songs and prayers from very different Christian traditions with which we began and ended each day.

 

The amount of information we shared and the quality of the contributions we brought were probably comparable to those of other conferences. Yet what was different was the atmosphere of our relationships and the striking diversity in the participants. We had four married couples (within a women's conference), one of them with two children, as well as a mother with a teenage daughter. One of the men was a former staff member of the World Council of Churches which proved very helpful on several of our themes.  Between them, the men looked after the driving and the interpretation, brought fresh fruit for our coffee breaks and took care of the children. Artistic activities, a relaxing FelderKrais programme, and opportunities to learn folk dances, ensured that the summer school was richly multidimensional.

 

The participants are intending to keep contact with one another, for instance:

·       providing help for the social projects arisiing from the disasters in Chernobyl and Baia Mare.

·       beginning to plan for a press campaign to draw attention to the extent of trafficking in women that is one of the crying scandals of today's Europe.

·       celebrating Creation Day on 1 September in our congregations as called for by the Ecumenical Patriarch.

We most sincerely wish much success to these and other projects which members of the summer school will be initiating and nurturing in their home churches and communities stemming from the thinking and planning we shared together in Slovakia.

 

Ruth Conway                                                                                                               September 2003

Email: m.r.conway@virgin.net

 

 


 

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Go to the Report on the EFECW summer school of 2001 - Living better with less

Go to EFECW's own website

Go to Environmental Education Working Group page

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european christian environmental network
Peter Pavlovic  | Conference of European Churches
Ecumenical Centre  | Rue Joseph II 174
BE-1000 Brussels  | Belgium
tel : 00 32 2 230 1732  | fax : 00 32 2 231 1413
email : ecen@cec-kek.be  | web: www.ecen.org