By Robin Gomes
Rome, July 5, 2019: Pope Francis has appointed a Sri Lankan as the secretary of the Vatican’s Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue (PCID).
Monsignor Indunil Janakaratne Kodithuwakku Kankanamalage, currently the under-secretary of the council, is a priest of the Diocese of Badulla, Sri Lanka.
Monsignor Indunil was born in 1966 of a Buddhist mother who converted on marrying a Catholic. Two years after his priestly ordination on December 16, 2000, he was sent to Rome where he obtained a doctorate in missiology from the Pontifical Urban University. The university later hired him as a professor at its Faculty of Missiology.
On June 12, 2012. Pope Benedict XVI appointed him undersecretary of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue.
Monsignor Indunil succeeds previous secretary, Spanish Bishop Miguel Ángel Ayuso Guixot, whom Pope Francis on May25 appointed the president of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue, following the death of Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran on July 5, 2018.
The Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue was established by Paul VI on Pentecost Sunday 1964, with the aim of promoting dialogue with persons of other religions, in line with the spirit of the Second Vatican Council, especially its declaration, “Nostra Aetate.”
It is a dialogue which while witnessing to one’s own faith, is at the same time, open to that of others. This is neither a betrayal of the Church’s mission nor a new method of conversion to Christianity. All this has been clearly established in the Encyclical Letter, “Redemptoris Missio”, of Pope John Paul II.
Although the Pontifical Council is the central body for dialogue in the Catholic Church, this commitment is carried out primarily through the local Churches. Many of the local Churches, in fact, have dialogue commissions at the regional and national levels and the Vatican’s Pontifical Council works in close collaboration with these commissions, encouraging their creation where it is lacking.
The council is composed of about 30 members and some 50 Councillors from across the world from various backgrounds and expertise, serving as consultants, specialists in religious studies or are engaged in the field of dialogue.
Source: Vatican News