Hindu Radhadesh, Belgium temple & center seems to be great example of religious tolerance in Christian majority Belgium
Jahnavi Jivana - Day 2 - Radhadesh Mellows 2020, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y1VjZuSONrI, 55 mins, premiered on 30th March 2020.
About the lead singer Jahnavi Harrison from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jahnavi_Harrison, "Jahnavi Harrison, also known by her spiritual name, Jahnavi Jivana devi dasi,[1] is a British musician known for her mantra meditation music (kirtan). She regularly appears as a presenter on BBC Radio 4's Something Understood programme and BBC Radio 2's Pause for Thought.[2]"
[Wiki References above:
1. Smullen, Madhava. "Second Generation Kirtan Leaders Commit to Initiation Vows". ISKCON News. Retrieved 29 May 2020.
2. "Pause For Thought - Pause For Thought: 'Let your heart be light.' - BBC Sounds". www.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 2020-04-28."]
About Radhadesh from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hinduism_in_Belgium#ISKCON_in_Belgium: "ISKCON Radhadesh temple, in the Septon neighbourhood of Durbuy. This is the only proper ISKCON temple in Belgium."
Radhadesh Mellows seems to be an annual ISKCON kirtan festival held in above Radhadesh, Belgium.
Now Belgium has a special place in my heart as it was my first foreign stint country (on a software development assignment) when I was in my early twenties (in the mid 1980s), and I had a wonderful time in that stint of over a year. I was living in Brussels, Belgium.
Belgium is a majority Christian country (over 60%) with Hindus being a very small minority (less than 1%) there, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religion_in_Belgium.
I think it is just a wonderful testament to the freedom of religion in Belgium in this case and in general in Western Europe, that this ISKCON temple has been setup there and has now acquired quite a bit of fame for those into such stuff. Of course, I am quite sure that this ISKCON community would be following laws of Belgium and would be making a positive contribution to the community there.
In my considered view, religious pluralism is a vital thing to promote in the world today. Yes, religious communities that are not law-abiding and indulge in non-self-defense violence against people of other religions (or no religion), are not good and must be discouraged. But peaceful and law-abiding communities of different religions including those of no religion must live in harmony.
In this context I would like to share my 2014 post: Harvard Pluralism Project: What is (religious) pluralism?, https://ravisiyer.blogspot.com/2014/09/harvard-pluralism-project-what-is.html.
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