You’re Invited

IRF Roundtable

Live from Berlin, Germany

- in connection with -

The 2024 INTERNATIONAL MINISTERIAL CONFERENCE

ON FREEDOM OF RELIGION OR BELIEF

Register Today

Please join for us for a special meeting of the IRF Roundtable, which will be held in Berlin, Germany. Admission is free.

The IRF Roundtable convenes weekly and is an informal space where individuals from faith communities, civil society organizations, and governments gather, share information and stories related to discrimination, persecution, and genocide, and take multi-faith actions to advocate for and build religious freedom for all.

Date and time

Tuesday, October 8 · 5 - 6:30 pm CEST

Location

Hotel Adlon Kempinski Berlin

Unter den Linden 77 10117 Berlin Germany

About this event

In-person and virtual attendance options are available.

Hosted by:

COMMUNITY GUIDELINES

Guideline #1: 

Everyone shall follow the Chatham House Rules. NO video or audio taping is allowed.

When a meeting, or thereof, is held under the Chatham House Rule, participants are free to use the information received, but neither the identity nor the affiliation of the speaker(s), nor that of any other participant, may be revealed.

Guideline #2: 

The IRF Roundtable has always been a safe space where survivors of persecution and representatives of all faiths and none can pull together and stand up for each other's freedom of thought, conscience, and religion on the basis of mutual respect, trust, and reliance. Everyone shall follow the Golden Rule and respect the right of each individual participant to speak at the Roundtable, design, and launch advocacy initiatives, and self-select into multi-faith coalitions of the willing. Participants may not start arguments, speak ill of, or in any way target or attack any individual participant or group at the Roundtable.

Guideline #3

This is a civil society-led and run Roundtable. Since one of our purposes is to bring civil society and governments together for information sharing and coordination, we always invite government officials to our meetings and welcome their updates and participation. We need civil society and governments working together to solve these problems. However, government participation in these meetings does NOT mean they endorse the multi-faith presentations at the meetings and/or the multi-faith initiatives that are launched by civil society participants.