Longtime family friend and former priest of our village, Bishop Salim Ghazal, who is also abbot of the monastery of Deir MKhalles in South Lebanon, will be honored with the Pacem in Terris award in Iowa next month: Diocese of Davenport.
Bishop Salim Ghazal of Lebanon, a man noted for his efforts to advance Muslim-Christian relations and to care for those in need, will accept the 2007 Pacem in Terris award in November in Davenport.
The award was created in 1964 to commemorate Pope John XXIII’s 1963 encyclical, Pacem in Terris (Peace on Earth). The honor is given by the Quad Cities Pacem in Terris Coalition, which includes representatives from the Davenport Diocese, Churches United of the Quad Cities, St. Ambrose University in Davenport, Augustana College in Rock Island, Ill., Bridges of Faith and Pax Christi Quad Cities.
Bishop Martin Amos will present the award to Bishop Ghazal on Nov. 4 at St. Ambrose University.
Ordained a priest in the Order of the Savior in 1958, Fr. Ghazal was assigned to an area near Sidon, Lebanon, in 1961. There he taught religion to both Christian and Muslim students, wrote Don Mosley in a nomination for the award. Though Fr. Ghazal’s area of instruction was Christianity, he arranged with the sheikh leading Islam classes to learn and teach each other’s material — thus illustrating the potential for inter-religious cooperation.
Fr. Ghazal kept working for interfaith understanding. In 1990, he and like-minded Muslims and Christians founded the Center for Dialogue and Development, which arranges symposiums, lectures, conferences and weekly discussion groups to encourage inter-religious cooperation. The organization also supports a retirement home, works with Habitat for Humanity to offer no-profit loans and offers computer training and Internet access.
My relative Nabhan Simaan will be hosting a dinner and fundraiser in honor of Bishop Salim in Irvine, California on November 11. You can bet I will be there. I have been hoping to see His Excellency again, but had put this wish aside because of the ominous political situation in South Lebanon. Funds raised at the dinner will go to Habitat for Humanity Lebanon, of which Bishop Salim is director. He has built four hundred houses for the poor through this organization.
If you are interested in attending the fundraiser, post in comments with your email and I will forward your inquiry to the organizers.