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Michael Henderson |
Many Americans judge Muslim countries and the Muslim
faith by the Taliban, by September 11 and al-Qaeda.
Many Iraqis judge the United States and Christianity by the
desecration of a Muslim cemetery, by abuses at Abu Ghraib and
incarcerations at Guantanamo Bay.
Both judgments are distorted and wholly unfair to great peoples and
great faiths. Sad to say, they are encouraged not only by unfortunate video
images but also by scurrilous misrepresentation. Our own faith must be weak
if we have to demonstrate its validity by running down the deeply held
beliefs of others.
Human nature is such that we are too often ready and even eager to
judge others by their actions and ourselves by our ideals. The answer lies
in a deeper honesty about our own shortcomings and a conscious effort to
reach out to others who are different from us.
Last year a New York Episcopal parish set an example for us. It
raised the money to rebuild a mosque in Kabul destroyed by US bombs. The
idea stemmed from Rt Rev Mark Sisk who took office as New York's bishop a
few weeks after September 11 and decided to make the improvement of
Christian-Muslim relations a priority. He said, " I believe it is our duty
as Christian leaders, witnesses to the presence of the living Lord, to take
initiatives that can bind up the wounds of the human community." It
had occurred to the bishop that it would be a wonderful thing if Christians
in New York City, people who had learned so recently about the
pain of an attack, could reach out to others who had also experienced
bombsfalling on their beloved city.
Bishop Sisk hopes that people in the United States and Afghanistan
will see that religion can strengthen rather than impoverish the human
community and that even though people of faith may have differences of
doctrine they can still live in harmony. "We are all brothers and sisters
living in the presence of a loving, forgiving and merciful God," he says.
"It is our joy to have the opportunity to reflect that love."
We may not all have the inspiration or opportunity for such a
dramatic gesture but we all can do things in our immediate surroundings to
discover the other. Several years back Indian friends of mine had the idea
to make one day of the year a day to open their home to strangers in the
community in order to get to know them better. They communicated that
thought to friends around the world. The first tentative experiments have
produced encouraging stories of people from dozens of nationalities who
have shared hospitality and an exchange of life experiences, among them
Christians, Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists and people of no particular faith.
In the last couple of years that simple idea has blossomed and
hundreds are now taking part in the first weekend of June in the
International Day of Open Homes and Listening Hearts.
Will Jenkins, who has been coordinating the event in the United
States with the theme "Do you talk to strangers?" says that all can have a
part: liberals and conservatives, young and old, immigrant and native: "By
connecting the rich resource of our many cultures, we can make America a
place of hope, creativity, and opportunity for everyone. Hopefully, we will
provide a model for a world torn apart by racial, religious and ethnic
hatred and fear."
It may have been too late for us to think of opening our homes in
this way this year but we can look ahead to 2005 and also, which of course
is more important, begin to make the reaching out to others the normal
practice of our daily lives.
With divisions fanned by the ongoing hostilities in Iraq and their
coverage, Open Homes and Listening Hearts will be needed more than ever.
The organizers have started a website that provides ideas how to make the
most out of the act, with a chance for families to post the results of what
they have learned. (info@ohlh.org)
Muslim scholar Maulana Wahiduddin Khan tells the story of the
Prophet seeing a funeral procession passing through the streets of Medina
and standing in respect of the dead person. A companion asked him, "Oh,
Prophet, that was the funeral of a Jew not a Muslim and yet you stood up in
respect." The Prophet answered, "Was he not a human being?"
We can take that to heart whatever our faith.
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Michael Henderson is the author of
Forgiveness:
Breaking the Chain of Hate |
Articles Archive of
Michael Henderson
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