The University Psychological Counseling Unit, in cooperation with the Studies and Planning Division, the Department of Food Sciences, and the Continuing Education Unit at the College of Agricultural Engineering Sciences, University of Baghdad, organized a workshop entitled “Tolerance: The Highest Expression of Human Values.” The workshop was held in line with one of the Sustainable Development Goals related to quality education.
The workshop was delivered by Dr. Amir Jiji Al-Dominici, Advisor to the Pontifical Committee for Interreligious Dialogue at the Vatican, and was attended by the Assistant Dean for Scientific Affairs Prof. Dr. Mohammed Shakir Mahmoud, along with a number of faculty members and students of the college.
The workshop highlighted the impact of tolerance on society, emphasizing its role in promoting safety, social security, and peaceful coexistence within communities. It also discussed the positive effects of tolerance in strengthening social harmony and stability.
The lecturer recommended raising awareness about the importance of tolerance and stressed the need to organize similar awareness workshops and lectures due to the significant role of tolerance in human life.
Media and Government Communication Division

You May Also Like

Vocational School Students’ Scientific Visit to the College of Agricultural Engineering Sciences

AI Applications in Scientific Research Workshop

Scientific Visit to the Market Research and Consumer Protection Center

Field Visit for a PhD Research Project

Digital Repository Workshop

Training Course on Modern Agriculture and Safe Pesticide Use

Faculty Participation in a Promotion Research Defense on Cyber Threats and Geodigital Competition

Scientific Field Visit to the General Meteorological Authority

Field Visit to the Dairy Processing Plant

Field Visit to the Commission for Scientific Research

Practical Lesson at the College of Agricultural Engineering Sciences

Specialized Field Training for Animal Production Students Enhances Practical Skills

Comments are disabled.