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Nigel Baker

Ambassador to the Holy See (2011-2016)

Part of UK in Holy See

27th June 2014

Should Diplomats study Religion?

Nigel Baker, British Ambassador to the Holy See
Nigel Baker, British Ambassador to the Holy See
Nigel Baker, British Ambassador to the Holy See

Earlier this week I was in London to address an in-house training programme of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) on religion and foreign policy. The course is aimed at British diplomats, but also public servants from other government ministries; there were a number of participants this week from the Ministry of Defence, and on previous occasions from the Department for International Development. It is aimed at those who need to understand better how and why religion – and religions – can affect the context in which policy needs to be formulated and implemented. It recognises, as Madeleine Albright explained so clearly in her autobiography, that we need “a sophisticated understanding of religion as a public force in the world”, alongside politics, economics, strategy and law, if as diplomatic practitioners we want to understand the world with which we are engaging.

I personally think that is especially important for British diplomats. We come from a culture that is far more secular than most of those in which we find ourselves living and working on overseas missions. By the end of a course that offers what is, admittedly, a very brief introduction to the major religions, the status of religious minorities, and rights of belief (including the right to be secular), we hope that participants will at least appreciate and reflect on the different features of religion in the 21st century and their implications for British foreign policy.

The course avoids value judgements. We do not argue that religion is good or bad (after all, we can all identify positive and negative aspects of the role of religion in politics, conflict, culture and development). We simply set out to show that it is there, has real influence in its different manifestations, and that an informed and intelligent understanding of religion and faith in global society is not only a legitimate and important tool of foreign policy practice, but core to the delivery of our foreign policy security and prosperity objectives.

“Religious literacy” is not a given in western society. I remember one of my senior colleagues accepting with some reluctance the premise that the FCO needed to understand the role of religion in public life better, on the basis that “of course as diplomats we need to deal with the irrational as well as the rational”. He is entitled to his point of view, but I think that in a world where 88% of the world’s population identify themselves as belonging to a specific religion, his rather jaundiced view is sub-optimal as a starting point. As we develop our own Diplomatic Academy in the FCO, an understanding of religion and belief needs to be part of our training mix.

About Nigel Baker

Nigel was British Ambassador to the Holy See from 2011-2016. He presented his Credentials to Pope Benedict XVI on 9 September 2011, after serving 8 years in Latin America, as…

Nigel was British Ambassador to the Holy See from 2011-2016. He presented his Credentials to Pope Benedict XVI on 9 September 2011, after serving 8 years in Latin America, as Deputy Head of Mission in the British Embassy in Havana, Cuba (2003-6) and then as British Ambassador in La Paz, Bolivia (2007-11). In July 2016, Nigel finished his posting, and is currently back in London.

As the first British Ambassador to the Holy See ever to have a blog, Nigel provided a regular window on what the Embassy and the Ambassador does. The blogs covered a wide range of issues, from Royal and Ministerial visits to Diplomacy and Faith, freedom of religion, human trafficking and climate change.

More on Nigel’s career

Nigel was based in London between 1998 and 2003. He spent two years on European Union issues (for the UK 1998 EU Presidency and on European Security and Defence questions), before crossing St James’s Park to work for three years as The Assistant Private Secretary to His Royal Highness The Prince of Wales. At St James’s Palace, Nigel worked on international issues, including the management of The Prince of Wales’s overseas visits and tours, on the Commonwealth, interfaith issues, the arts and international development.

Nigel spent much of the early part of his FCO career in Central Europe, after an initial stint as Desk Officer for the Maghreb countries in the Near East and North Africa department (1990-91). Between 1992 and 1996, Nigel served in the British embassies in Prague and Bratislava, the latter being created in 1993 after the peaceful division of Czechoslovakia into the separate Czech and Slovak Republics.

Nigel joined the FCO (Foreign and Commonwealth Office) in September 1989. Between 1996 and 1998 he took a two year academic sabbatical to research and write about themes in 18th century European history, being based in Verona but also researching in Cambridge, Paris and Naples. The research followed from Nigel’s time as a student at Cambridge (1985-88) where he read history and was awarded a First Class Honours degree, followed by his MA in 1992.

Before joining the Foreign Office, Nigel worked briefly for the Conservative Research Department in London at the time of the 1989 European election campaign.

Nigel married Alexandra (Sasha) in 1997. They have one son, Benjamin, born in Bolivia in September 2008.

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