Kargador at Dawn

Kargador at Dawn
Work in the Vineyard

Thursday, December 01, 2016

Christian and Muslim Partnership in an Era of Extremism

Muslim and Christian Partnership in the Era of Extremism
by Fr. Eliseo ‘Jun’ Mercado, OMI
Badaliyya - Philippines
Muslim and Christian partnership is a major issue and concern as we prepare ourselves to face the challenges of extremism. This has been made more complex by the rise of a new strain of extremism (ISIS, ASG, “Trump-ism”) both in Islam and Christianity in our contemporary times. Coupled by historical relations that are, more often, marked by rivalry and conflict, Muslim and Christian collaboration has become a more problematic task in our age. Biases and prejudices are as strong as ever if not stronger. Often our perception of each other is shaped more by historical memory and the mass media than actual knowledge and experience. 
The Rise of Extremism
Today, the rise of Extremism is a single factor that seems to block Muslim and Christian collaboration. Yet, the new strain of religious extremism is not a monopoly of Islam. Our secular humankind understands this new religious extremism in a very narrow sense. Various religious revivalist movements in Islam as well as in Christianity or in other religious traditions (in Hinduism in India and Buddhism in Sri Lanka and Burma) are, often, lumped together under a generic label of religious extremism. This is interpreted as a reaction to the present secular realities.
In Islam, the religious revivalist movement is much wider and broader. Muslims themselves like their Christian counterparts do not accept the label "fundamentalism" to describe the present religious extremism. For one thing, religious re-awakening differs from country to country. In fact, it is as complex as the very relations between Muslims and Christians.
As in the Christian re-awakening movement, the Islamic one is a desire and the determination to a “return” to the perceived basics of the religious tradition. There are those who are inspired by the ancient religious grandeur of traditions and want to replicate them in our present time. The institution and praxis of the so-called “golden era” have become their blueprint for the present and the future. On the other hand, there are those who attempt to recapture the dynamism of religion and reconcile it with the exigencies of a modern and technological era and the condition of globalization in which old rules cannot possibly remain unaltered. Then there are those who embrace the new wave religious re-awakening to oppose the increasing secularizing trends of the contemporary society.
Common Characteristics of Religious Revivalism
There are four basic common characteristics of the current religious re-awakening. First, there is the accepted blueprint of society as well as individual life. This blueprint is understood as given directly by God in the revelation. The blueprint is completed and/or nearing completion in the perceived ‘golden age’ of the religion. The members of the movement are called upon to either re-produce or hasten the realization of the said blueprint in our times.
Second is the fact that religious re-awakening is a reaction to the contemporary secularizing trends that are perceived as menace to the faith of the individuals and the community. The adherents of this movement believe that this new “secularism” and the perceived moral and social “corruption” threaten to destroy the very fiber of the traditional mooring of the individuals and societies. Re-awakening, in this sense, is a strong reaction to the present social and moral order that is perceived as a new “Paganism”.
Third, religious revivalism gives an answer to individual’s needs for healing and identity. No doubt, the woundedness and injustice, particularly the structural violence that reduces the greater number of people to poverty, seeks healing and redress. The religious re-awakening movements focus on this individual and communal “brokenness” and the necessity of healing by way of strict adherence to the imperatives of faith as given in “illo tempore”. In the same vein, the growing alienation of people in our contemporary world surfaces the need for identity and belonging where lines and parameters are clearly defined and delineated. Often, these parameters are also God-given thus cannot be changed or modified at all times. The religious reawakening movements give “security” and identity as well as belonging to individuals and groups who are considered “saved” or “redeemed” constituting the new “Holy Nation”.
Fourth, the new religious awakening is seen as an alternative vis-a-vis the growing arrogance of the state to think and decide for all. The imposition of a uniform economic and social order in this era of globalization threatens to destroy the specific character of peoples, nation and individuals. The new religious re-awakening movements take this power from the state and business and restore it to God.
There is, today, a strong belief that the new surge of religious extremism in the world is the single factor that erodes the inter-religious dialogue and collaboration that have gained currency in the post Vatican II era. Religious extremism both in Islam and Christianity as in other religions has taken an “exclusivist” form that views all others as “foreign” bodies and source of contamination and defilement.
Legacies and Hopes of Muslim-Christian Collaboration
he new religious extremism has brought to the fore the lingering resentment and injustices of our past relationships. They are deeply rooted in the psyche of Muslim-Christian encounters. With few exceptions, there was really no mutual openness between Muslims and Christians but a steady accumulation of biases and prejudices. These developed a sort of exclusivism of culture and identity drawing all things into a calculated “otherness” and reciprocity.
The legacies of the past are still alive. They remind the living of the bitter encounters between Christians and Muslims. In some instances, these legacies are enshrined in the living traditions, though mostly ceremonials and rituals, they continue to enslave the present day consciousness that prevents Muslims and Christians to venture into a new relationship of trust and brotherhood.
The historical territorial contests between “Islamic” and “Christian” powers from the seventh centuries (in the Middle East, North Africa, Europe and Asia) to the present (in the Persian Gulf and again in Asia, Middle East and Africa) continue to live on. In a similar vein, the perceived “Christian” or Western dominance in the globalizing trends of new world social and economic order is seen as another form of territorial contest that undermines the true course of Islamic history.
All these legacies are familiar enough and part of our present problem. Often, they exercise tyranny over our spirits. They have produced a culture and a habit of suspicion and confrontation that make inter-religious collaboration and dialogue, truly, a very difficult task. It requires a commitment and determination to steadily school ourselves to resist and reject our habit of preferring suspicion to trust; our instinct to prefer the familiar confrontation to a new relationship of partnership in the world that is in difficult transition.
In the past as well as today, there is an ever-growing awareness of common territory and affinity between Islam and Christianity. The Qur’an in Chapter 5 verse 82 unequivocally encourages Muslims to cooperate with Christians. “Thou wilt surely find the nearest of them in love to the believers are the ones who say, ‘ We are Christians’; that because some of them are priests and monks, and they wax not proud” (S.5:82).    
In the same vein, the Second Vatican Council document, Nostra Aetate, clearly articulates the common territory and affinity between Christianity and Islam. “The Church has also a high regard for the Muslims. They worship God, who is one, living and subsistent, merciful and almighty, the creator of heaven and earth, who has also spoken to men. They strive to submit themselves without reserve to the hidden decrees of God, just as Abraham submitted himself to God’s plan, to whose faith Muslims eagerly link their own. Although not acknowledging him as God, they venerate Jesus as a prophet, his Virgin Mother they also honor, and even times devoutly invoke. Further, they await the day of judgment and the reward of God following the resurrection of the dead. For this reason they highly esteem an upright life and worship God, especially by way of prayer alms-deeds and fasting.
Over the centuries many quarrels and dissensions have arisen between Christians and Muslims. The Sacred Council now pleads with all to forget the past, and urges that a sincere effort be made to achieve mutual understanding; for the benefit of all men, let them together preserve and promote peace, liberty, social justice and moral values.” (NA3).
 The Legacy of our Relationship in the Southern Philippines
The interreligious gap and misunderstanding in the Southern Philippines has a long history. It dates back from the period of colonialism when the Philippines was annexed by Spain in the 16th century and later by the US at the turn of the 1900.
The encounter with Spanish forces was characterized by continuous war, except for intermittent truces that resulted to alienation and opposition between the Christianized Filipinos and the Islamized Filipinos now known as the “Bangsamoro peoples”.
The period during the American period was also characterized by war, only this time, by decisive military victory that put an end to the once powerful Sultanates in Mindanao and their annexation to the Philippines. This annexation paved the way for the programs of pacification and assimilation which included among others the opening of Mindanao for migration from the Luzon and the Visayas.
These historical facts have given rise to three significant realities that continue to haunt Muslim-Christian relations in the Philippines, even today. To wit:
  1. The lingering suspicion and lack of trust that continue to characterize the relations between Christians and Muslims;
  2. The sense of injustice on the part of the Bangsamoro and the Indigenous peoples for their lost ancestral domain.       After years of migration, they have found themselves a minority in their traditional homeland. The Muslims are now majority only in five provinces out of the 24 in Mindanao; and
  3. Poverty and neglect that led to, among others, the highest in mortality, illiteracy rate, lowest in access to basic services, especially health and education.
The above three are few of the causes of the renewed rebellion in the Southern Philippines. The peace process in the Southern Philippines follows the ever-changing tide and wind of the government in Manila. This is the context that has made urgent the interface of Christianity and Islam in the Philippines.
First, there is an urgent need to distance the face of our faith traditions from the stereotypes of rebels/terrorists, on the one hand and oppressors and the army of occupation, on the other.
Christians and Muslims of goodwill, specifically bishops, ulama, ustadz, priest and lay leaders beginning in early 70’s stood for justice and respect for human rights even during the height of battles between the Philippine regular army and the Moro National liberation Front. The provinces of Cotabato and Sulu – the lands of many battles have witnessed examples of solidarity of people of goodwill from Christianity and Islam who continued to stand for justice and human rights.
The first association of Christian-Muslim Religious Leaders in Mindanao began in 1973 few months after the declaration of Martial law. Then following the Peace Agreement in 1976, a more formal national conference involving leaders of Catholics, Protestants and Muslims began to address the problems of the South and to bring these issues to the attention of the National government. Then in the 1990’s, again, as a consequence of the 1996 Final Peace Agreement between the Philippine Government and the Moro National Liberation front, various Churches and Universities have begun undertaking Inter-faith dialogues and peace education programs. The Bishop-Ulama Forum was formed to support the peace process in the Southern Philippines and the implementation of the said accord.
All these initiatives contributed, through conferences and consultations, to a formation of yet another ‘thread’ beyond the familiar stereotypes and slogans in southern Philippines. This partnership, albeit still a minority, that work for peace, reconciliation and partnership attempt to build a more inclusive communities and governance.
The second is the interreligious dialogue initiative. Interreligious dialogue has a particular and peculiar history in the Philippines both in the local and national level given the situation of the war in Southern Philippines. Simply to name a few:
  • A partnership to stand for justice and defense of human rights;
  • A support to the peace process in Southern Philippines that continues from 1976 to the present;
  • An attempt of mutual accompaniment in celebrations of festivals like Duyog Ramadhan for the Muslims and Christmas for Christians;
  • A pressure on the protagonists of the war to go back to the negotiating table to settle their differences;
  • Involvement of the religious from both sides of the divide in Tract II of the peace process in Southern Philippines.
  • Adopting Peace Education in schools and institutions of higher learning to imbibe a culture of peace in campuses; and
  • Assistance to the victims of war, specifically to the internally displaced.
In a similar vein, the religious both Muslims and Christians (Catholics and Protestants) are active in various consultations and fora that seek to impact policies affecting the Southern Philippines.   These attempts to influence official policy formulation range from peacebuilding to the shape of peace agreement that will be acceptable to the major stakeholder in Mindanao.
The urgency for dialogue given the concrete context of the Southern Philippines and the attempts of leaders from both divides have greatly influenced the Philippine government to adopt interreligious dialogue as a priority in seeking a just and sustainable peace in Southern Philippines. This has become an official policy that has marked the Philippines’ strong intervention and support to interreligious dialogue at the international bodies like UN and the Alliance of Civilizations, and of late in the Non Aligned Movement.
A New Wind blowing and shaping our relationship…
 Peacemaking is at the heart of our faith tradition…”Blessed are the peacemakers for they shall be called sons and daughters of God.” Peacemaking demands for a new relationship – a new solidarity for all peoples across political and ideological boundaries, across cultures and religions.
I wish to echo the late Pope John Paul II’s message in Damascus at the Great Umayyad Mosque in Damascus, 6 May 2001.
“It is my ardent hope that Muslim and Christian religious leaders and teachers will present our two great religious communities as COMMUNITIES IN RESPECTFUL DIALOGUE, NEVER MORE AS COMMUNITIES IN CONFLICT”. It is crucial for the young to be taught the ways of respect and understanding, so that they will not be led to misuse religion itself to promote or justify hatred and violence. Violence destroys the image of the Creator in his creatures, and should never be considered as the fruit of religious conviction.”
“Better mutual understanding will surely lead to a more objective and comprehensive knowledge of each other’s religious beliefs at the practical level, to a new way of presenting our two religions NOT IN OPPOSITION, as it happened too often in the past, BUT IN PARTNERSHIP FOR THE GOOD OF THE HUMAN FAMILY.”
In the same vein, the Common Word, a letter addressed primarily to Pope Benedict XVI and All Christian Leaders with 138 signatories that speak of weight, influence and scholarship open a new horizon for the search of common grounds in our partnership.. I personally consider the letter something historical with long enduring impact.
In the letter the Koran verse on tolerance is quoted: “Had God willed He could have made you one community. But that He may try you by that which He hath given you (He hath made you as ye are). So vie one with another in good works. “Unto God ye will all return, and He will then inform you of that wherein ye differ” (Al-Ma’idah, S. 5:48).
This Letter is a very important step in dialogue between Christians and Muslims.  Often Christians have taken the initiative regarding dialogue, and they have so done well. It is important that this first step continues in this direction with increased clarity, even showing differences and the need for correction.
I believe that with time this Letter can create an opening and a greater convergence on the more delicate issues of religious freedom, the absolute value of human rights, the relationship between religion and society, the use of violence, in short, burning issue that worries all believers in our world today.
 People, institution, nation, communities, and individuals endure and are recognized by their fidelity to values and traditions they stand for. And to us, the three values that stand are family, joyful hard work and our faith & traditions. Today people admire Mother Theresa or Oscar Romero or Martin Luther King Jr. or Anwar Sadat, Desmond Tutu or Nelson Mandela, not because of their achievements but for the values and beliefs they stood for. They believed and lived with integrity and no embarrassment.
The need to provide the Story line…
Where do we locate ourselves within this flux and how do we view our confusion to say the least and deep crisis at worst in that new wind that blows and shapes a new world?
More than ever before, there is a need to “re-appreciate” and perhaps even “re-construct” the stories of successes and failures, of power and wealth in the present age now labeled as both “post modernism” and “post ideologies”. I turn to Gil Bailie (cf. Violence Unveiled: Humanity at the Crossroads: 1996) for the apt description of this age. He takes the person of Bernard (a character in Virginia Woolf’s novel, The Waves) to depict the modern person. In the novel, Bernard says: “I have made up thousand stories. I have filled up innumerable notebooks with phrases to be used when I have found the true story, the one story to which all the phrases refer, but I have never yet found that story.”
I believe that Christians and Muslims, notwithstanding the difficulties, have found the way to the writing of the needed story line… it is there in the story of our family, tribe and clan. It is a “kindredness” shaped not only by blood, but also by our community and eco-system. And our story line rooted in faith and traditions that form our values that lay the foundational set of virtues to move together forward in achieving our goals for ourselves and for humankind. We are darn proud of our story and we share it with the world with smile in our faces and joy in our hearts.
Muslim-Christian collaboration is not something abstract. It is a human activity, which involves our total life experience. It takes place in our individual as well as communal lives as we live out our faith and conviction according to our living traditions. No doubt, our partnership and collaboration depend upon mutual trust and understanding. It demands respect for the identity as well as the integrity of the other. It rests on the conviction that God who is all merciful and compassionate desires to draw all peoples and the whole creation into a relationship of love and peace.
Our partnership should enhance a new culture that enables and empowers us to draw from each other’s traditions and common resources to help face today’s threats to global survival and work together toward peace with justice and the integrity of creation. We must spare no effort to live and work together towards reconciling conflicts, eradicating bigotry and prejudices, and empowering grassroots level communities to act upon their own choices in self-development towards a more just and participatory society.
There are no simple formulas for enhancing collaboration and partnership. Every situation demands a serious study and reflection of the many and varied factors at play. Some of these are historical, social or doctrinal. But whatever the factors and their magnitude, it is our duty to see a better community where peoples of differing faiths and traditions live in love, justice and peace. We have the obligation to emphasize, that which unites us and make a determined effort to set aside that which would divide us. We can only do this if we have full understanding of what the other believes, and are committed to the principle of respect and recognition of the beliefs and feelings of every community and person.
In this long and difficult journey of Muslim and Christian collaboration, the Spirit is with us. This same Spirit who was at work in the Incarnation, Life and Resurrection of Christ is NOW at work in our endeavors to breakdown the barriers which create division and conflict so that we can see in the other the neighbor whom we are called to love and to serve.
In the recent appeal of Muslim Scholars (the Common Word), what our relationship, ultimately, redounds to the two great commandments of Loving God and Loving our neighbors. Yes, we have a lot of differences and historical experiences both ugly and beautiful but what shall unite us is our love of God and neighbor.
The law, as St. Paul’s letter to the Romans states, leads us to sin while love and compassion leads to life and communion and forgiveness.
In concrete terms, there is the urgent need to steadily school ourselves to prefer trust to suspicion; prefer friendship to familiar confrontation; and above all, prefer love and service to the usual hatred and bigotry. This demands a shedding off the old as well as dying. But is this not the meaning of the saying: “the old gives way to the new and death leads to life?”
In Conclusion
I will end this presentation with a quote from the martyred President of Egypt Anwar Sadat (yet another Nobel Peace laureate) expressed at the Knesset during his historic visit of the Holy City of Jerusalem.
“… Yet, there remains another wall. This wall continues and constitutes a psychological barrier between us, a barrier of suspicion, a barrier of rejection, a barrier of fear, of deception, a barrier of hallucination without any action, deeds or decision. A barrier of distorted and eroded interpretation of every event and statement... It is this official statement as constituting 70% of the whole process. Today, through my visit to you, I ask why don’t we stretch out our hands with faith and sincerity so that together we might destroy this barrier?”
No doubt, we can lead the way by stretching our hands with faith and sincerity so that together we may build a new world with no borders and barriers yet preserving our identity as we tell and re-tell our story line with smile in our faces and joy in our hearts.
A final quote: “The age of nations is past. It remains for us now, if we do not wish to perish, to set aside the ancient prejudice, and build the earth.” (Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, SJ)
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Select Bibliography
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Abul-Fadl, Mona. 1991 Beyond Cultural Parodies and Parodizing Cultures: Shaping a Discourse in The American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences, Vol.8, no.1(March)15-44.
Armstrong, Karen. "A History of God," and "The Battle for God,"
Asghar Ali Engineer. MODERN MUSLIM INTELLECTUALS AND THE QUR'AN Islam and Modern Age, October 2004 
Djerejian, Edward. UNITED STATES POLICY TOWARD ISLAM AND THE ARC OF CRISIS. James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy at Rice University.
Esposito, John. ISLAMIC FUNDAMENTALISM in 1996 Encyclopaedia Britannica.
Lewis, Bernard. THE REVOLT OF ISLAM.
Momayezi, Nasser. Islamic Revivalism and the Quest for Political Power in The Journal of Conflict Studies: Fall 1997.
Saludo, Ricardo. Radical Islam in Southeast Asia. Asiaweek.com/95/1215.
C.J.B le Roux & HW Nel. Radical Islamic Fundamentalism in South Africa. An Exploratory Overview. Journal for Contemporary History, December 1998. 23 (2)
Rajiv Chandrasekaran. Southeast Asia Shaken by Rise Of Strict Islam. Washington Post Foreign Service:Sunday , November 5, 2000 .
Tajuddin, Talghat. Threat of Islam or Threat to Islam - a Speech by Supreme Mufti, Representative of the Central Spiritual Board of Muslims for Russia and the East-European countries of the Commonwealth of Independent States Moscow, June 28, 2001.
Virtual Information Center (VIC). PRIMER: MUSLIM SEPARATISM IN SOUTHERN THAILAND. Published on 22 July 2002.





On the Road to Mosul - Tinged with Sectarian Suspicion

On the Road to Mosul – Tinged with Sectarian Suspicion
Tom Westcott
Freelance Journalist
IRIN News

Dust-covered children collected useful-looking pieces of rubbish or food discarded by soldiers. They tossed them into grubby sacks as they walked along the roadside, towards the frontline of Iraq’s offensive against so-called Islamic State. Others held up a two-fingered victory salute or wave, hoping for donations of food or even cigarettes, while their fathers herded sheep nearby. 

But few of the military vehicles from the Popular Mobilisation Forces – a loose coalition of predominantly Shia fighters – even slowed down as they raced on towards the battle, towards Tal Afar, a strategic town on the road to Mosul.

One PMF soldier told IRIN the children couldn’t be trusted. He said they’d been trained by IS as young militants or used as informants. “They’re not naive, these children,” he said. “They know exactly what they’re doing now, [just] as they knew exactly what they were doing with IS then.” The Shia fighter fiercely denied his suspicions were linked to the children’s faith – the majority of Mosul’s citizens are Sunni.
1st photo: Liberation Forces


PMF flags, many showing venerated figures in Shia history, fly everywhere across the newly liberated desert terrain: from the vehicles and buildings to the sandbanks themselves. Ostensibly, they’re triumphant markers of the key territorial gains made against IS, but the flags also hint at something less visible: the simmering sectarian tensions that underpin this conflict. Feelings of mutual suspicion run high.

Mosul momentum

A few kilometres from the frontline, a sad convoy of decrepit farm vehicles and ancient cars – many on tow due to lack of fuel – gathered in a sandy valley. The 100 or so families inside had fled that morning as clashes reached their village of Tel Serwal.
“The most important thing for us before we enter any area is to ensure that all families have escaped to a safe place,” said Commander Abu Thurrat, who leads a unit in the PMF’s powerful Badr Organisation, the group leading the fight around Tal Afar. “Our focus is always to liberate humans first.”

The PMF (al-Hashd al-Shaabi in Arabic) have played a vital role in Iraq’s two-year fight against IS. This past weekend, parliament voted to make them an official government force. This may bring them under a greater degree of central control, although exactly how this will work isn’t yet clear. 

The forces and the new law are both controversial. Many Sunni lawmakers boycotted the vote; some concerned about Iranian influence, others about alleged abuses against civilians. For now, the PMF have agreed not to enter Mosul proper, but they’re very much active on the outskirts.

On the ground near Tel Serwal, families in the convoy were full of gratitude for the PMF’s role in their liberation. "Ever since IS took over... we considered ourselves like dead people. And today, after being freed by [the PMF], we are finally alive again," said Yassar Awad Ismael, 35. "It was terrible under IS. We had no services, no electricity or telephone networks, no work, and no petrol for our trucks."
2nd photo: Mosul Residents



Ismael described how villagers had struggled to adhere to strict doctrines and lived in daily fear for their lives after IS militants publicly executed one local man for no apparent reason. Other punishments were also meted out in the middle of the street, in full view. "If you were caught smoking or if your beard was too short, you got 20 lashes,” he said. “And if your trousers were too long, or if your wife was seen without a full-face veil, it was 15 lashes.”

As PMF forces made swift advances towards Tal Afar in the past month, IS has forced Tel Serwal residents to abandon their homes and pitch tents just outside the village, turning them into human shields – a civilian buffer zone to slow down the offensive.
"[IS] kicked down our doors, entered our homes and shot around us with machine guns, forcing us to leave and live in tents outside the village," explained Chamali Faisal Hussain, 45. "We had to leave most of our things, and they took everything from us, even our food.”

Fearful families had spent the last fortnight holed up in the desert encampment until fighting started in earnest around Tel Serwal. "When the rockets and mortar fire started close to the village, IS were distracted and we could escape," Ismail said.

Gratitude and suspicion

Like many others in the convoy, Hussain expressed heartfelt thanks to the PMF for her liberation from IS. Unlike widely circulated images showing women tearing off their veils in other parts of Iraq, she and other female family members still wore their niqabs. 
Commander Thurrat was quick to highlight useful cooperation between the PMF forces and some of the villagers, who had provided intelligence information about IS numbers, positions, and activities. 

But after fighters distributed food and cigarettes amongst the convoy of fleeing villagers, the atmosphere shifted from one of gentle euphoria to concern and mutual suspicion. 
Men and boys were separated from their families as Iraqi police investigation units arrived to start screening them for suspected collaboration or affiliation with IS. 
Such screenings are conducted near frontlines at sites across the country, as well as at some displacement camps. But there is little transparency in the process and there have been widespread allegations of abuse and score-settling.

Journalists were ordered to leave the area once the investigation units arrived but IRIN heard the men of Tel Serwal being instructed to surrender any weapons they carried, with assurances that there would be no retribution.
3rd photo


While civilians are sometimes suspicious of the PMF, and the fleeing residents of Tel Serwal admitted that they had no idea where they were going to be taken, the forces have valid reasons to worry about some of those who lived under IS. In Iraq, as in IS strongholds elsewhere, there have been multiple reported cases of former militants shaving their beards, cutting their hair, and hiding amongst ordinary fleeing civilians to avoid detection. 

"No army has really entered this area for years, and it has long been favoured by al-Qaeda, IS, and other terrorist groups," said Commander Thurrat, stressing the importance of such investigations. 

Uncomfortable homecomings 

While an estimated 3.1 million Iraqis have been displaced, a fair number are now heading back home, especially in Ramadi, capital of Anbar province. In the north too, nearer Mosul, a handful of residents are starting to return to liberated villages. They are finding that the landscape, as well as the flags, has changed. 

Humble farmyards are now overlooked from rooftops by soldiers armed with guns and others with binoculars trained on the horizon.

In one tiny mud-hut village, three old men stood for hours in the dusty central track, holding small, dirty containers and lengths of hosepipe, hoping one of the military vehicles trundling towards the frontline would let them syphon out a little petrol to fuel their antiquated machines. 

On the outskirts of another village, the corpses of two IS fighters lay spread-eagled on the ground. Bloated after several days’ decay, their legs were still tied together by a length of rope, indicating that they had been dragged through the desert. Their presence contradicted commanders’ claims to IRIN that all dead IS militants were swiftly buried, and the fact that the bodies had been abandoned so near to a village suggested it might have been done on purpose, as a warning to other militants and the locals who lived under their control.

Wednesday, November 30, 2016

2nd Sunday of Advent (A)



Readings: Isaiah 11: 1-10; Romans 15: 4-9; Matthew 3: 1-12 

Selected Passage: “In those days John the Baptist appeared, preaching in the desert of Judea (and) saying, Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand!" (Matthew 3: 1-2)

Meditation:  The reign of God is at hand. It finds home only in a repentant heart.  Change our old ways and bad habits!  Repentance is turning away from doing bad and begin doing good fdor others.  After receiving the Baptism of Repentance, we make visible our commitment to new life by doing good for others, especially to people in needs. This way, we, truly, welcome the Lord to come into our lives. www.badaliyya.blogspot.com

DHIKR SIMPLE METHOD... 
1st step: Write the text or Dhikr (the Arabic word for REMEMBRANCE) in your heart. 
2nd step: Let the text remain always in on your lips and mind - RECITING the text silently as often as possible... 
3rd step:  Be attentive to the disclosure of the meaning/s of the text in your life. 


Sunday, November 27, 2016

1st Sunday of Advent (A)


Short Reflection for the 1st Sunday of Advent (A)
ADVENT is a season of joyful expectation for the coming of the Lord celebrated at Christmas. Three characteristics should mark our Advent celebration – (1) “make straight our crooked ways”; (2) “allow ourselves to be taught by God”; and (3) Do Good to other and Do NO harm both to neighbours and environment.
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Readings: Isaiah 2.1-5; Romans 13.11-14; and Matthew 24.37-44.
Selected Passage: “Therefore, stay awake! For you do not know on which day your Lord will come”. (Matthew 24: 42)
Meditation: The Lord comes and goes through our life but often we miss his coming and going. Our celebration of Advent is to stay awake and be attentive and sensitive to the Lord’s coming into our lives daily else we miss meeting the Lord. Cf. www.badaliyya.blogspot.com

Friday, November 18, 2016

Islam and Christianity: Encounter/Confrontation, but also Conversion

Islam and Christianity: Encounter/Confrontation, but also Conversion
by Samir Khalil Samir

To save Islam from fundamentalism, it must encounter the Christian West that is able to live its faith in modernity.  Without counting out the possibility that a Muslim could convert to the Christian faith.  Fourth and last part in the series "Islam and the West", by Fr Samir Khalil Samir, Egyptian Jesuit, professor of the history of Arab culture and of Islamic studies at Saint-Joseph University in Beirut.
War of Civilizations 

Does a war of civilizations exist?  Is Islam waging a war against Christianity? Since Samuel Huntington wrote his book ("The Clash of Civilizations"), it seems that one can only be either for or against such a clash.  Clearly, the West has its civilization; the Islamic world also has its civilization.  I say that a clash of civilizations has always existed. The point is that, in the world of terrorism, the world "clash" has become a synonym of "war". Muslim fundamentalists define Westerns as "crusaders":  This word stems for its use in Saudi Arabia, where "Westerner" and "crusader" are synonyms. Up until 15 years ago, this term was used only in that country. 

Islamic fundamentalism depicts the clash of civilizations as a religious clash: Islam against Christians. But can we define the West as "Christian"?  I think not. First, the West refuses to define itself as such.  It is a product of Christianity, but currently Western society has distanced itself from it. Thus, the West's answer cannot be defined in terms of a war of Christianity against Islam.  Yet, nor can the West's answer be a war against Islam.  A war must be waged against terrorism, against Islamic fundamentalism, but not against Islam.  I can see the tendency in certain Italian and American groups of trying too easily to assimilate Islam as a counter-Christian civilisation, and this is wrong. 

Encounter and Confrontation 

What is needed instead is to strengthen a clash, a confrontation, a debate, a critique on Islam. In my view, there is a clash, just as there is a clash between all cultures: Islamic, Chinese, Indian...  But this confrontation can also transform itself into an encounter, in mutual enrichment. 

Throughout history, civilizations have always encountered and confronted each other.  There have always between both one and the other.  This is not tragic: alls groups take something and reject something when they encounter each other. This relationship, this encounter/confrontation, must take place in truth and clarity.  There can be no reticence when it comes to saying that in Islam there are the makings of violence in the Koran, alongside the makings of peace.  It must also be said in no uncertain terms that the makings of violence have been developed more than those of peace. 

Unfortunately, certain Catholic intellectuals, out of "respect" for Islam, hide this element and thus do a favour neither to Islam nor to the truth. Some might say: the makings of violence can also be found among Christians.  This is true but the violence expressed by Christians is not theorized in the Gospel.  In Islam instead it is the religion's founding book that presents these seeds. 

To purify the Koran's message, Muslims should distinguish between the original nucleus of the book (referring to Mecca) and the subsequent part (referring to Medina).  But to do this -- as we saw in the previous installments of this series -- the Koran must be studied as a historical book and the Western distinction between ‘laicity’ and religion, between modernity and faith, must be assimilated. 

A Westernized Islam 

I am certain that hope for the Islamic world can come only from an Islam that has been acculturated in the West, and specifically in Europe. The only way for Islam to have a place in the modern world is by assimilating modernity with its critical spirit and its distinction between religion and politics, reason and sentiment, etc, in a sense that it westernizes, without disavowing faith.
 
There are many Muslims who westernize, but they only get so far.  They do not understand that faith needs to be defended with an interior choice.  Unfortunately, if these Muslims are not able to synthesize Islam and modernity, as soon as a fundamentalist imam comes along, everyone will follow him. But which West can help Islam to modernize? 

A part of the West maintains an attitude of total closure toward the Muslim world.  In answer to Islamic violence in the world today, they close themselves off to any dialogue and Muslims are driven back into fundamentalism. 

Then there are Western atheists.  But if Muslims find help only among atheists, those who say that religion should not be a factor, they will refuse it. But if Muslims find Western Christians for whom religion is the fulcrum upon which modernity can be assimilated, then possibly they can be urged to find their own way of integration. 

A Christian who achieves harmony between modernity and faith can help a Muslim achieve this same harmony. I would like to point out however that another path is not to be excluded.  If a Muslim is not able to achieve a synthesis between his faith and modernity, he could also decide to become Christian. 

In the encounter with Christians, Muslims discover that, due to the Incarnation, Christianity has united heaven and earth, the divine and the human, religious culture and scientific culture.  The Incarnation also suggests that there is no opposition between divine and human: there can be difficulty, but synthesis is possible. 

Conversion to Christianity 

Actually a young Muslim, today, will find himself alone in this dilemma: either be an atheist Westerner or be a Muslim who rejects the West.  Instead a third way is also possible: become Christian. 

A conversion to Christianity is something desirable, a choice that is worthy and full of value.  Unfortunately, I come across clergy figures and even some bishops who fear thinking of such a thing, counting it out as a possibility, in the name of a false religious respect.  It is as if priests and bishops did not understand that Christianity is the fullness of every religion's path.  But it is only respect for a person and love for his struggle to live his faith in the modern world that urges me to announce the Gospel to him. 

First of all, I will try to help a Muslim find a synthesis between modernity and faith, in his Islamic faith; but if this does not happen, if this is too difficult, I can also propose the Christian path.  There exists more than just the rejection of modernity in the name of religion, or the rejection of faith in the name of modernity: there is also the path of synthesis offered by Christianity and witnessed by Christians.