Interreligious and Intercultural Understanding Panel, Live Blogging - Written by georgetown01 on Friday, March 7, 2008 17:15 - 1 Comment
Live Blogging - Interreligious & Intercultural Understanding Panel
17:15 - Starts the presentation and inauguration of one of the lasts two panels.
17:16 - Thomas Banchoff, director of the Berkley Center for Peace, Religion and World Affairs at Georgetown University, is introduced.
17:16 - DeGioia, president of Georgetown University, is introduced.
17:16 - Dean Jane McAuliffe, Dean of Georgetown College, is introduced.
17:16 - Sadiq Al-Mahdi, former Prime Minister of Sudan, is introduced.
17: 16 - Schlomo Ben-Amin, former Israeli Foreign Minister & Vice President of the Toledo International Centre for Peace.
17:19 - John J. DeGioia: “I will offer different perspectives for religious understanding”.
17:22 - “We denied those who are different from our own”.
17:23 - “Georgetown University was the 1st American university to hire a full-time rabbi”.
17:24 - “Global Conversations on Religion are offered by Georgetown.”
17:28 - “Most people think that Muslims respects the West, say the statistics”.
17:32 - Banchoff: “We are working hard to take the message out to others”.
17:33 - “National Competitiveness, Religious diversity, so many complex ways around the world, the world of terror, is like watching the controversy of the cartoons”.
17:35 - “Doing businesses around the world requires more understanding of different religions and cultures”.
17:37 - “We try to bring these issues out of the Religious campus and to the Law Center and Health Center”.
17:38 - Ben-Amin: “Any practical solution of political Islam does not go further than outside a box that is all military in the Israeli or American case”.
17:39 - “Not every Islamic Group is Al-Qaeda, nor military”.
17:40 - “There are Islamic Groups that are willing to have a political response”
17:42 - “I believe, aside of what Israel’s position is, and America’s, Hamas is not far off to becoming one of these (Political Group)”.
17:43 - “Once they went became political they needed to answer to the will of the population”.
17:46 - “Israel is not capable of maintaining a two states solution”.
17:47 - “We need to reach a settlement with democracy”.
17:47 - “Corruption is the reason they were defeated, not Islam, they voted for Hamas because it was the only alternative”.
17:48 - “Secular nationalism failed in producing a State that is for reform”.
17:50 - “National movements had to split before reaching the promise land (always been a radical wing)”.
17:53 - Banchoff thanked Ben-Amin for his reflections.
17:54 - McAuliffe: “I will give a theological point of view to these issues”.
17:55 - “The context has been the same for over seven years”.
17:57 - “The methodology combines open sessions that each participant addresses to each other and the general public also can have a word on it”.
17:58 - “The focus of our sessions has changed in these six years”.
18:00 - “This methodology is not new but ours really works”.
18:01 - “There are two factors we are dealing with in this global world: globalization of religion itself and affiliation fluidity”.
18:03 - “Multilateral Religious: (google) “I’m a Catholic but I’m really into Buddhism”.
18:05 - “We are moving into so many religions so fast that it will complicate even more a real understanding”.
18:06 - Banchoff presents Al-Mahdi.
18:06 - Al-Mahdi: “I’m going to speak straight on these issues; I’m going to speak in black and white”.
18:08 - “Confrontational directions”.
18:10 - “Lebanon and Sudan, two success stories that now, in fact, are falling”.
18:11 - “Intellectual levels have been suffering; intellectual understanding as well. We need to see. The issue is to reconcile”.
18:12 - “But all of this intellectual coming together is not enough”.
18:14 - “Political, military and economic points are being address as religious ones, and this has to change”.
18:14 - “In normal times Islam is not aggressive”.
18:17 - “Despotism (Politically Denied), and social injustice, colonization, occupation and cultural hegemony: these are the causes behind the Muslim crisis.”
18:19 - “We need a credible strategy to solve all of these points”.
18:20 - “The United Nations are too concerned in security itself, and it should be focused more on human security”.
18:22 - “Reactionary/Reconciliation: struggle”.
18:24 - “Universal Values”.
18:25 - “Whoever expresses himself as (not only in terms of statistics) open minded, and they are (Muslims) are astonished that a man such as Obama can come into a political campaign”.
18:28- Applause fills the room as Al-Mahdi finishes his speech.
18:30 - Tom Banchoff begins to field questions from the audience.
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The former treasury secretary and president of Harvard Summers stressed in the recent issue of Foreign Policy the importance of opening the doors of early education to girls and women in the developing world as a vital asset in setting the groundwork for modernization. Would it be a leap of faith to suggest that the better the overwhelmingly young population of the developing world receives an adequate education, the easier it would be for us to maintain our religious faith. Recent books suggest if there had not been a historical conflict between Christianity and Islam, the conflict may well have fallen between Western Christianity and Eastern Orthodox Christianity. By the same token, if there was no clash beween Islam and Christianity, there would have been a growing clash within Islam between the dominant Sunni majority and Shi’i minority. I also like to point out that the Muslims of Yugoslavia were not on the same league as the Muslims of the Middle East. Although they took pride in their religious identity, they were neither practicing the rituals of Islam nor any different in culture and outlook than their fellow Europeans and yet when Serbia branded them as outsiders they were no different than the besieged refugees of the Middle East until they split and formed their own states like Kosovo.