Interfaith Group
Related: About this forumCan Interfaith Dialogue Cure Religious Violence?
There are no easy answers here.
April 25, 2013
By Lucia Hulsether
In the wake of the Boston Bombings, Eboo Patel, public intellectual and director of the Interfaith Youth Core (IFYC), has proposed, in a recent article on HuffPo, that this explosive violence resulted partly from a failure of interfaith dialogue.
With the caveat that interfaith programs are not a miracle solution, he offers three ways that this work can help:
First, interfaith helps harmonize peoples identities. Patel goes on:
Patel suggests that the Tsarnaev brothers might have been less vulnerable to extremism if they had been involved in discussions with people from other backgrounds about how their faith identity was mutually enriching with their nationality and citizenship.
http://www.religiondispatches.org/archive/politics/7076/can_interfaith_dialogue_cure_religious_violence
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kwassa
(23,340 posts)He was seeking a meaningful identity, and chose to do that with a form of Islam that allowed him to blame America for his problems.
Dzhokhar actually fit in this country with many different kinds of people quite comfortably, but he was under his brother's influence. Many cities are multicultural now; it is more the norm than the exception. Tamarlan would not have been available for such dialogue.
pinto
(106,886 posts)![](/emoticons/hi.gif)
okasha
(11,573 posts)interfaith dialogue can do are prevent mutual demonization and strengthen faith communities against those who would manipulate them for political and economic purposes.
goldent
(1,582 posts)but I believe people who would plant bombs in crowds have unique mental problems, and probably wouldn't respond to cures that seem reasonable to us.