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Michael Henderson |
One of the most important
issues facing the world could be how the Christian and Muslim worlds can
live and work together without compromising the claims of their faith. I
notice that the Archbishop of Canterbury is wrestling with this question.
Dr Williams was asked last month whether Muslims could go to Heaven. His
replied: "Yes, in so far as neither I nor any other Christian controls
access to heaven. It is possible for God's spirit to cross boundaries."
Can we also cross boundaries?
I
have been helped by the perspective of "the God Squad" - Monsignor Tom
Hartman and Rabbi Marc Gellman - in their book "How Do You Spell God". They
write, "We have no problem with folks who believe that their religion is
right. We have no problem with folks who believe their religion is more
right than any other religion. We do have a problem with people who believe
they have the only right religion and then go out and hurt other people
because of it."
I
recently met two men who had, indeed, been going out to hurt others because
of their religion, one a Christian, the other a Muslim. They come from a
country which is on the frontline of Muslim-Christian relationships,
Nigeria, where thousands have been killed and dozens of mosques and
churches destroyed in inter-religious strife. And their witness, standing
together at an international conference in Caux, Switzerland, was powerful:
two militant religious terrorists, as they have been called, now working,
as they put it, “for the transformation of society”.
Muhammad Nurayn Ashafa is an imam in Kaduna and Rev. James Movel Wuye is a
Christian pastor. They are joint directors of the Inter-Faith Mediation
Centre in Kaduna, one of the most important cities in Northern Nigeria.
Together they described at an Initiatives of Change conference what had
“transformed hate into love, vengeance into reconciliation”.
In
the early 1990s the two men tried to have each other killed during communal
riots. Muslim extremists cut off Pastor James’s arm when he was defending
his church and Christian extremists killed Ashafa’s uncle thinking it was
he as well as the imam’s spiritual advisor and two brothers.
Later at a meeting at the Governor’s House they met and it was suggested to
them that they might have a part in bringing healing. They were encouraged
to talk and began to question the cost of the violence, finding passages in
the Bible and the Koran which showed common approaches. The Imam says that
as they focussed on what they could take on together rather than looking at
their differences there was hope for “a united front against evil”. They
saw their survival as a sign from God and set up an organisation to
encourage dialogue.
Real friendship, however, was slower to come. “We were programmed to hate
one another, to evangelise or Islamicize at all costs,” says the pastor. “I
used to want to have nothing to do with Muslims until I met Ashafa.”
A
turning point for Imam Ashafa came when he heard another imam preach in the
Mosque about forgiveness and the example of the Prophet. “At that point the
concepts of forgiveness and mercy were far away from my conviction,” he
says.
It
took Pastor James three years to overcome his hatred. The seeds were sewn
when the imam and other community leaders visited his sick mother in
hospital. “Ashafa was radiating love, but I’d been blinded by hate and
pain,” he says. A turning point for him was the word of an American
evangelist: “You cannot preach to someone you hate.”
In
the last few years they have worked together through their Inter-Faith
Mediation Centre with a particular emphasis on bringing young Christians
and Muslims together for conferences and workshops. Whenever violence has
broken out they have gone together to the streets to calm tempers and find
solutions. At one point Imam Ashafa protected Christian women in his home
and was threatened with death by militant Muslims and Pastor James saved a
Muslim woman. They have written a book “The Pastor and the Imam: Responding
to Conflict”.
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Michael Henderson is the author of
Forgiveness:
Breaking the Chain of Hate |
At
the invitation of the state governor the International Centre for
Reconciliation at Coventry Cathedral was invited to help end the violence
in Northern Nigeria. When the centre’s Director, Canon Andrew White, came
to Nigeria to see how their centre could help bring the different faiths
together the Anglican bishop recommended he meet Imam Ashafa and Pastor
James. For five months they worked with the Centre and with other
Nigerians to produce a document, the Kaduna Declaration, which in 2002 was
signed in the presence of some 2,000 religious leaders by eleven Muslims
and eleven Christians, all influential in the community. The document is
based on the Alexandria Declaration of Religious Leaders for Peace in the
Holy Land.
The
document starts: “In the name of God, who is Almighty, Merciful and
Compassionate, we who have gathered as Muslim and Christian religious
leaders from Kaduna State pray for peace in our state and declare our
commitment to ending the violence and bloodshed, which has marred our
recent history. According to our faiths, killing innocent lives in the
names of God is a desecration of His Holy Name, and defames religions in
the World. The violence that has occurred in Kaduna State is an evil that
must be opposed by all people of good faith. We seek to live together as
neighbours, respecting the integrity of each other’s historical and
religious heritage. We call upon all to oppose incitement, hatred and the
misrepresentation of one another.”
Both Pastor James and Imam Ishafa want to stay faithful to their religion.
“I always say I will die as a Christian,” says Pastor James, “and I am not
compromising one inch on my principles. But we are creating space for one
another.” Embracing him on the platform, the Imam said, “He is no more an
enemy but a friend.” They regard themselves as victims of the situation
they had a part in creating. It is the very fact that they were both at
the heart of the previous inter-religious violence, Pastor James told me,
“that gives us our credibility”.
The challenge before them is great. Latest figures reveal
that in the last three years 53,787 people have been killed in the fighting
between Christian and Muslim groups in Plateau, just one Nigerian state..
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