The Canadian Centre for Ecumenism was founded in 1963 by Reverend Irénée Beaubien and promotes interfaith dialogues between different religions and Christianity. In 1976, a board of directors was established and they obtained a federal charter.
Mission statement
The Canadian Centre For Ecumenism's mission is to raise awareness and harmony through education and activities that promote Christianity and all other religions and collaborate to become interfaith.
Religious affiliations
A religious affiliation is an association between a person and a religious group. The Canadian Centre For Ecumenism has many religious affiliations which include:
The Green Churches Network
Prairie Center of Ecumenism
Multi-Faith Saskatoon
World Council of Churches
Réseau oecuménique justice et paix
Faith dialogues
An interfaith dialogue is a written or spoken conversation between people and their difference in religions. The centre's main model is the Christian-Jewish Dialogue which was made in the 1960s. This dialogue has helped to form other interfaith dialogues around Canada. The Faith Dialogues include:
Christian-Jewish Dialogue of Montreal
North American Orthodox-Catholic Theological Consultation
On September 7, 2011 the Canadian Centre for Ecumenism launched the Youth Chess Tournaments for Peace along with MonRoi Inc. at the Palais de Congrès in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The game was sponsored by the Chess'n Math Association as well as the World Chess Federation. The young interfaith chess players are taught peace through playing chess. The chess event coincided with their 2nd Global Conference of World Religions After 9/11 with a special presence by the Dalai Lama. The 2nd Global Conference of World Religions After 9/11`s objective was to help for a cultural understanding of peace as well as bring all different religions together to discuss the different problems our world is facing. In 2009, Tony Blair and Belinda met with eight inspiring young Canadians from a leadership program. This program was made to bring together different people from different religious backgrounds and bring them together to achieve the Millennium Development Goals by 2015. Two of the eight Canadians were Maya Smith and Nicholas Pang sponsored by the Canadian Centre for Ecumenism. The goal with working as an interfaith pair is to raise awareness to thousands of people through activities and online activities about malaria and help communities to save lives affected by it.
Publication
The Canadian Centre for Ecumenism has a periodical journal called Ecumenism. The journal's main focus is important religious issues. Four issues are printed annually and there are currently many people subscribed to it in over 40 countries around the globe from Canada, the United States, Europe and Asia.
Library
There is a public library at their location in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The public can find books, magazines, articles and audio-visual collections of topics relating to ecumenical movements, churches, human rights, Sacred Scriptures and many more. Anyone can use their online search from the library collection found on their personal website.