Interfaith Group
Related: About this forumWhat is Interfaith Cooperation For?
Its a question of civic space, Eboo Patel explains, rather than of political ideology.
May 5, 2013
By Eboo Patel
Some years back I met the Prime Minister of the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, Nechervan Barzani. One of the first things he did was thank me for the American military intervention that he described as freeing his people from oppression. I informed him that many of my friends viewed the Iraq War as profoundly unjust and protested vociferously against it.
Barzani was rendered speechless for a moment. When he finally spoke it was to say, through clenched teeth, that the only thing unjust about the war that removed Saddam Hussein was that it didnt happen sooner.
I was reminded of that story when I read Lucia Hulsethers thoughtful critique here on RD of my recent Huffington Post article on the urgency of interfaith cooperation after the Boston bombings. As religious diversity continues to grow both in demographic fact and in salience in our public discourse, and as interfaith efforts expand, it is more important than ever to engage in a thoughtful exchange about the purpose of interfaith programs. I wish to use this space to advance my view of what interfaith cooperation is for. The ideas I present below have been developed in conversation with my colleagues at Interfaith Youth Core, the organization I founded and lead, and it guides the work we do with college campuses and students.
Let me begin by summarizing one of Hulsethers main arguments. She maintains that mainstream interfaith projects reach a wider base by avoiding divisive political topics and glossing over issues of justice and structural violence. This is a problem because, to Hulsether, those are the issues that really matter. Hulsether names civil liberties, material conflicts, and American military campaigns abroad as some examples that fit her list of priorities. She writes, Appeals to interfaith often prioritize projects for recognition of such identities over attention to systemic forms of material and social inequality and interfaith programs always provide means to other ends.
http://www.religiondispatches.org/archive/politics/7100/what_is_interfaith_cooperation_for_/
MADem
(135,425 posts)The Barzani name is very well known in Kurdish liberation circles--in fact, the "George Washington" of the movement in Iraq--but revered across what is known as "Kurdistan"-- is a Barzani.
Time and time again, the USA has promised intervention and screwed the Kurds; in FDR's day, and in Nixon's day. The Kurds regard the removal of Sadddam as more than a "definition of justice" as this writer points out, but something akin to a promise kept, really.
Where you stand, as always, depends on where you sit. It helps to be familiar with the brutality of oppression endured by those people (beyond the famous "gassing" during the Iran-Iraq war...the apartheid and vicious treatment was just astounding); it's why Barzani was so forceful.