Islamic Relief Worldwide’s co-founder Dr Hany El Banna recently took part in a high-level interfaith delegation to the Vatican, where they met with His Holiness Pope Leo XIV.
The delegation – led by HRH Prince Hassan bin Talal of Jordan – brought together faith leaders and humanitarian voices committed to advancing dialogue, peace, and shared human values in a time of growing global uncertainty.
Discussions highlighted the urgent need for interfaith cooperation, ethical leadership and mutual respect amid rising wars and prejudice. The delegation urged a renewed commitment to compassion, justice, and protecting human dignity.
Islamic Relief Worldwide has a long history of interfaith collaboration – working with Christian, Jewish, Hindu, Buddhist and other partners to support vulnerable people of all faiths and none. Such collaboration has helped promote peace and social cohesion in countries such as the Philippines and the Central African Republic, and provide rapid aid during disasters.
When an earthquake struck Indonesia last month, Islamic Relief’s Faith-based Community Emergency Response Team –comprising trained volunteers from mosques, temples and churches – was among the first responders.
The delegation’s visit to the Vatican took place for the 8th Colloquium, hosted jointly by the Dicastery for Interreligious Dialogue and the Royal Institute for Inter-Faith Studies under the theme of Human Compassion and Empathy in Modern Times.
In his remarks Pope Leo XIV described this theme as “particularly timely for our world today,” observing that “compassion and empathy are sadly in danger of disappearing today. Technological advances have made us more connected than ever before, but they can also lead to indifference”.
Noting the strong tradition of compassion in both Islam and Christianity, he continued: “In such a context, Christians and Muslims, drawing from the richness of our respective traditions, are called to a common mission: to revive humanity where it has grown cold, to give voice to those who suffer and to transform indifference into solidarity.”
“For our traditions, human compassion and empathy are not something additional or optional, but are a call from God to reflect his goodness in our daily lives”.