Religions 9 Peace PDF
Religions 9 Peace PDF
Religions 9 Peace PDF
in a world of conflicts
Contents
Editorial
by Patrick Laude
Foreword
by Renaud Fabbri
15
23
18
34
82
92
New Reality: Peace and Universal Responsibility, according to the Dalai Lama
105
by Sofia Stril-Rever
Jerusalem, City of Peace
by Louis Massignon
117
121
135
Integral Pluralism as the Basis for Harmony: The Approach of His Highness the Aga Khan
147
by Ali Lakhani
Out of the mouths of babes: Comenius and World Peace
by Elizabeth Kristofovich Zelensky
Les religions, entre violence et paix
by Eric Vinson
163
173
195
Editorial
Both in the past and the present religion has given rise to inspirations of war as well as to promotion of peace. While religious values
entail a desire to promote peace
both on this earth and in the thereafter, religions including those
which are conventionally deemed
most peaceful often make use of
warfare symbolism and do engage
into conflicts sanctioned or justified
by some of their representatives.
Is there a necessary connection between religion and violence?
Before attempting to answer this
question, it must be stressed that
religions, or religious people, have
no exclusive privilege over war and
violence. The arguably most murderous and atrocious wars ever took
place in the 20th century namely
World War I and World War II, and
their main motivations were not
religious, but rather political and
ideological. However, there is no
question that religious principles
and feelings have played an important role not only in wars, but also
sometimes in inordinate violence
of all kinds. It bears specifying,
however, that violence can come in
many forms, whether external or
internal, and that even outwardly
similar violent actions may be motivated by very different intentions
an unprecedented scale. Human beings are violent creatures. Now we RF: With globalization, religious
are simply witnessing another out- principles are being increasingly
break of violence and terrorism challenged both by the rise of a postthis time, religiously articulated.
modern relativism and by extremist
movements that threaten to destroy
RF: When faced with acts of violence religion from within. What role traperpetrated in the name of a reli- ditional spirituality and ethics can
gion, the understandable reaction play in addressing the currents atof many believers is simply to claim tempts to derail world religions and
that violence has nothing to do with to turn them into totalitarian and
their faith or more problematically nihilistic ideologies? What concrete
to put the blame on external factors, strategies can be devised in this rethe wrong-doings of others etc.... In spect? Or is it too late?
your opinion, what may prompt believers to adopt a more critical and KA: This I have dealt with in the prereflexive attitude toward their own ceding answer. But the point is that
faith and the history of their reli- every single religious human being
gion?
has to activate their tradition in a
positive way. It is no use waiting for
KA: We must all, religious or secular- religious leaders to take the initiaist, adopt a self-critical attitude. The tive. We all have to do what we can,
religious have a particular respon- in whatever sphere of life we find
sibility to bring to the fore those ourselves, to think creatively, and
tendencies that lie at the heart of practically, not simply leaving
all religious traditions that speak of this to other people. All too often, rethe imperative of compassion and ligious people are simply concerned
respect for all others. Each has de- with their own spirituality. They
veloped its own version of the Gold- want in Christian terms to be
en Rule: Never treat others as you saved. They meditate and take part
would not wish to be treated your- in yogic meditation in order to feel
self and insisted that this is the es- peaceful and tranquil. They want to
sence of faith. This is the standard by look after their own families or their
which religious people should meas- own countries and do not care about
ure themselves day by day. The Gold- the rest of the world. But all the reen Rule is no longer a nice ethic but ligious traditions insist that you canan urgent global imperative. Unless not simply indulge a private spirituwe ensure that all peoples are treat- ality; the religious imperative impels
ed as we would wish to be treated us all to heal the suffering we see all
ourselves the world will simply not around us actively and realisticalbe a viable place.
ly. The Prophet Muhammad (PBUH)
10
11
12
Daoism, Greek philosophical ration- destroy one another. That has never
alism, and monotheism. The first been truer than it is today.
of these was innovation: the great
sages and philosophers
were not afraid to bring Every single one of the Axial Sagsomething entirely new
to the traditions they had es developed the Golden Rule
inherited, to innovate and and insisted that you could not
attempt something dras- confine your compassion to your
tically novel. All too often
own group.
religious people seem to
imagine that they have
to cling to the past, instead of using RF: Do you think that the problemthe great insights of their tradition atic of the Axial Age has some relto speak to the circumstances of the evance for a Muslim audience, since
present. This is desperately needed the emergence of Islam postdates
today. Every religious tradition is the end of the Axial Age by several
a dialogue between an unchang- centuries?
ing Eternal Absolute and changing
conditions on the ground; once a KA: Rabbinic Judaism and Christifaith tradition is unable to speak to anity were both latter-day develits troubled present, it will die as opments of the original Axial spirit
paganism eventually died. The sec- developed by the Prophets of Israel.
ond insight was the ethos of com- The Quran too reiterates the essenpassion. Every single one of the Ax- tial aspects of the Axial movement,
ial Sages developed the Golden Rule especially in its concern for compas(See above) and insisted that you sion. Indeed, the Quran insists that
could not confine your compassion it is not teaching anything new but
to your own group. You had to have that it is simply a reminder to forwhat one Chinese sage called jian ai: getful human beings who can easily
concern for everybody. You could overlook these essential principles.
not confine your benevolence for
your own group or for people you RF: You sometimes suggested that
liked. These sages were not living we may be entering a new Axial
in peaceful, idyllic circumstances Age. The Axial Age was marked by
but were living in societies like our the emergence of new faiths and the
own, where violence had reached an renewal of older ones, new insights
unprecedented crescendo. They said about the self, the world and the dithat unless human beings treated vine Reality. Short of a new revelaother people as they would wish to tion, how this new Axial Age could
be treated themselves, they would transform the shape of our world
13
14
Foreword
15
16
ly characterized as a "post-secular
turn" at the global level.
In the present issue, alongside the contributions of contemporary scholars, we have chosen to
reprint a text by a religious and political philosopher, Eric Voegelin. His
work is still little-known in the Middle-East but can potentially illuminate the religious dimension of the
contemporary crisis and the rise of
an apocalyptic and millenarian ideology that pretends to establish the
city of God on earth but would destroy religion from within if it were
to succeed. In the lineage of Plato
who could declare that the City is
the soul writ Large (The Republic),
Voegelin believed that political dis-
17
________________________________________
The following text is chapter 27 from Eric Voegelin's Autobiographical Reflections (University of Missouri Press, 2011). The text is reprinted with the permission of the publisher.
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
terms of an ecumenical caliphate. In Unity of Mankind (1962), Voegeneither spiritual community can one lin summarized his enquiry as folfind a definitive resolution in ecu- lows: first, imperial organizations
menic peace.
as attempts to represent humanity
With Matthew, the immediate began with the cosmological impereference to the apocalyptic expectations of Daniel
(24: 15ff) indicated that
expectations of a new Any intramundane apocalyptic
world were entirely in efforts to transform the ecumene
order. Voegelin said that
into a world were doomed beMatthews expectations
amounted to a metas- fore they commenced.
tasis, a new disposition
in which there will be no
problems of world-empires (CW, rial organizations of Mesopotamia
17: 151). Like all metastatic expec- and Egypt. In the cosmological emtations, it bought its own problems pires, the universal order was exwhen the future ecumene did not pressed by the myth of the cosmos.
show up on time or, to date, not at The second form, the ecumenic emall. In some of the passages of Saint pire, gained a new truth of human
Paul, for example, the penetration existence but imperial order tended
of the ecumene by the Gospel was to become ecumenically expansive
quickly to be followed by the return and only tentatively connected to
of Christ and the elevation of ecu- an ecumenic religion that endowed
menical humanity to the Kingdom the empire with the characteristics
of God. As these expectations faded of a world insofar as the religion
with time, the ecumene tended to evoked the participation of human
become more purely spiritual and order in transcendent being. Ecusignify a humanity that received menic empires, furthermore, have
the Word. In other passages the ec- been succeeded by orthodox emumene tended to signify the insti- pires where the association of imtutionalized Church that continued perial power and a religious world
its worldly existence under the pro- was understood as a necessity
tection of an empire (CW, 11: 115). and became stabilized over long
Such a compromise was inevitable periods (CW, 11: 154). In turn, the
inasmuch as metastatic faith invari- orthodox empires, by which were
ably was eventually contradicted by meant the Western European Latin
the nonapocalyptic structure of his- Christian empire, the Eastern Greek
tory.
Christian empire, the Islamic empire
In World Empire and the and the Far-Eastern Neo-Confucian
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
At the beginning of this discussion the problem of how to define religious extremists who resort
to violence was raised, and it was
said that there are difficulties both
with calling them religious and also
in avoiding the label. An alternative
would be to accept that they are religious but with a poor grasp of their
religion. This actually is a characteristic of many such violent individuals, they have a simplistic and inaccurate view of their religion. They
are inspired by a scriptural quotation or two, its interpretation by
someone they respect, and then they
go off and commit the evil deed. If
we see religion as rather similar to
is in the way. The Abrahamic religions all use analogies and stories,
and these are very effective at connecting with an audience and making something that might otherwise
seem to be abstract to become quite
personal. The thing about examples
is that they never entirely fit a particular case but they often more or
less fit, and they do of course make
43
44
45
46
47
48
of Gods love to them is the same as derives its sustenance from the Crethe fact that He is with them wher- ator. The natural world is in a conever they are [Quran, 57:4], wheth- stant state of peace because accorder in the state of their nonexistence ing to the Quran it is muslim (with
or the state of their wujud they a small m) in that it surrenders (taare the objects of His knowledge. slim) itself to the will of God and thus
He witnesses them and loves them rises above all tension and discord
never-endingly.10 Commenting on (3:83, 9:53, 13:15, 41:11). In its northe above saying, Dawud al-Qaysari, mative depiction of natural phenomthe 14th century Turkish Sufi-phi- ena, the Quran talks about stars and
losopher and the first university president of the
newly established Otto- The conditions that are conduman State, says that God cive to a state of peace ... are prihas written love upon
Himself. There is no doubt marily spiritual and have larger
that the kind of love that implications for the cosmos, the
is related to the manifes- individual, and society.
tation of [His] perfections
follows from the love of
His Essence, which is the source of trees as prostrating before God
the love of [His Names and] Quali- (55:6) and says that all that is in
ties that have become the reason for the heavens and on earth extols His
the unveiling of all existents and the glory (59:24). By acknowledging
connection of the species of spiritual Gods unity and praising His name,
man joins the natural world in a
and corporeal bodies.11
The second premise is related substantive way a process that unto what traditional philosophy calls derscores the essential link between
the great chain of being (dairat al- the anthropos and the cosmos or
wujud). In the cosmic scale of things, the microcosm and the macrocosm.
the universe is the best of all pos- The intrinsic commonality and unity
sible worlds because, first, it is ac- between the human as subject and
tual, which implies completion and the universe as object has been
plenitude over and against potenti- called the anthropocosmic vision.12
ality, and, second, its built-in order
49
50
tween heaven and earth.18 The fitrah (Quran, 30:30), the primordial
nature according to which God has
created all humanity, is essentially a
moral and spiritual substance drawn
to the good and God-consciousness
(taqwa) whereas its imperfections
and excessiveness (fujur) (Quran,
91:8) are accidental qualities to be
subsumed under the souls struggle
to do good (al-birr) and transcend
its subliminal desires through his intelligence and moral will.14
(...)
51
52
This and other verses (2:1903) define clearly the reasons for taking up arms to defend religious freedom and set the conditions of just
war (jus ad bellum) in self-defense.
That the verse, revealed in the first
year of the Hijrah, refers to the grave
wrongdoing against Muslims and
their eviction from their homeland
for professing the new faith confirms
that the migration of the Prophet
was the last stage of the forceful
expulsion of the Muslim community from Mecca. This was a turning
point for the attitudes and ensuing
tactics of the Prophet and his followers to protect themselves against
53
Ibn Rushd, Ibn Taymiyyah, Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyyah18 and others but also
ignores the historical and contextual
nature of such juridical rulings. The
same holds true for Muslim political
philosophers and theologians who
take a different position on the bifurcationist framework of dar al-islam
versus dar al-harb.19 Moreover, these
rulings were by and large the jurists
response to the de facto situation
of the military conquests of Muslim states rather than their cause.
Certain jurists begin to stress such
reconciliatory terms as dar al-ahd
(the land of the covenant) and dar
al-sulh (the land of peace) during
and after the 11th and 12th centuries when the Muslim states were
confronted with political realities
other than unabated conquest and
54
55
56
57
regulating war and using force. The children, and the elderly.29
guiding principle is that of fightContrary to what Khadduri
30
ing against aggression, which is to claims , the global bifurcation of dar
fight in the way of God, and not to
29 Imam Shawkani, Fath al-qadir, abridged by
be the aggressors: Fight (qatilu,
Sulayman Abd Allah al- Ashqar (Kuwait:
lit. kill) in the way of God against
Shirkat Dhat al-Salasal, 1988), p. 37; Le Coran: Viola le Livre French translation and
those who fight against you, but do
commentary by Yahya Alawi and Javad Hadidi
not transgress the limits. Verily, God
(Qom: Centre pour la traduction du Saint Codoes not love aggressors (2:190; Cf.
ran, 2000), pp. 318-9; Muhamad Asad, The
Message of the Quran (Maktaba Jawahar ul
also 4:91 and 9:36). Both the classiuloom: Lahore, n.d.), p.41; Shaykh Muhamcal and modern commentators have
mad al-Ghazali, A Thematic Commentary on
interpreted the command not to
the Quran, tr. by A. Shamis (Herndon: International Institute of Islamic Thought, 2000),
transgress (la tadadu) as avoiding
pp. 18-9.
war and hostilities in the first place,
30 In his War and Peace in the Law of Islam (Balresorting to armed struggle only to
timore: The Johns Hopkins University Press,
defend ones freedom, and, once
1955) Majid Khadduri goes so far as to translate jihad as warfare (p. 55) and permanent
forced to fight, sparing the lives of
war (p. 62), and claims that the universalnoncombatants that include women,
ism of Islam, in its all-embracing creed, is im-
58
of disbelief (kufr).32
This extended meaning of
jihad as jus ad bellum, i.e., armed
struggle in self-defense can also be
seen in the anticolonialist resistance movements of the modern period. In the 18th and 19th centuries,
calls for jihad were issued across
the Islamic world to fight against
colonialism. For the anticolonialist
resistance movements of this period, jihad functioned, first, as the
religious basis of fighting against
colonialism and, second, as a powerful way of mobilizing people to join
the resistance forces. Among others,
the Barelvi family in India, Shaykh
Shamil in Chechenya, Shaykh Abd alQadir al-Jazairi in Algeria, the Mahdi
family in the Sudan, Ahmad Urabi in
Egypt, and the Sanusiyyah order in
Libya fought against European colonial powers.33 It was during this
period of resistance that jihad took
a cultural tone in the sense that the
fight against colonial powers was
seen as both a military and religiocultural struggle. Despite the enormous difficulties faced by Muslim
scholars, leaders, merchants, and
villagers in Egypt, Africa, India and
other places, the jihad calls against
the European armies did not lead
to an all-out war against local nonMuslim communities. Even in cases
where the Muslim population had
32 Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyyah, Ahkam ahl al-dhimmah, ed. by Subhi al- Salih (Beirut: Dar al-Ilm
lil-alamin, 1983, 3rd edition), Vol. I, p. 17.
33 Cf. John Voll, Renewal and Reform in John
Esposito (ed.), The Oxford History of Islam
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000).
59
60
35 Al-Jabartis Chronicle of the French Occupation, tr. by Shmuel Moreh (Princeton: Markus
Wiener Publishers, 1997), p. 26.
36 Farajs treatise has been translated by Johannes J. G. Jansen, The Neglected Duty: The
Creed of Sadats Assassins and Islamic Resurgence in the Middle East (New York: Macmillan Publishing Company, 1986), pp. 160-230.
61
62
edge, the jizya tax was not a significant source of income for the state46,
and it exempted the dhimmis from
military service. In some cases, the
jizya was postponed or abandoned
altogether by the head of the state
as we see in India under the reigns
of Akbar, Jahangir and Shah Jahan.47
The jizya was a compensation for
the protection of the dhimmis by the
state against any type of aggression
from Muslims or non-Muslims. This
is attested by the fact that the polltaxes were returned to the dhimmis
when the Muslim state had been unable to provide the security of its
non-Muslim minorities.48 In most
cases, the jizya was imposed not as
individualtax like the kharaj but as
collective tribute on eligible dhimmis.49
While Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyyas famous work on the dhimmis
contains many rulings that present a
condescending view of non-Muslims
and advocate policies of humilia-
tion against them50, many other jurists were insistent on treating the
dhimmis with equity and justice.
As people under the protection of
the Prophet, Jews, Christians and
other religious minorities were not
to be forced to pay more than they
could afford nor to be intimidated
and oppressed because of their religious affiliations. Advising Harun
al- Rashid (d. 803), the famous Abbasid caliph, on the treatment of the
dhimmis, Abu Yusuf exhorts him to
treat with leniency those under the
protection of our Prophet Muhammad, and not allow that more than
what is due to be taken from them
or more that they are able to pay,
and that nothing should be confiscated from their properties without
legal justification.51 In making this
strong advice to the Caliph, Abu Yusuf narrates a tradition of the Prophet in which the Prophet says that
he who robs a dhimmi or imposes
on him more than he can bear will
have me as his opponent. Another
well-known case is the execution on
the order of the Prophet of a Muslim who had killed a dhimmi. In re-
63
Since 9/11 and the Second Iraq War, the Muslim Middle East has witnessed an outburst of millenarian expectations. Prof. Eric Geoffroy analyzes how contemporary fundamentalist movements are distorting
traditional Islamic eschatology in order to fuel sectarian violence and
regional conflicts. (Managing-Editor)
Pour un nombre croissant
dhumains ou de groupes humains,
il ny aura de paix possible sur terre,
lchelle collective, que dans la
grande Paix messianique annonce
64
65
- Dans le Coran :
Il y a eu deux grandes priodes dans la rvlation islamique,
laquelle stend sur vingt-trois ans:
celle de la Mecque et celle de Mdine. La tension eschatologique est
patente dans les premires rvlations mecquoises, lesquelles ont
visiblement pour but de secouer et
avertir lhumanit. Ces sourates, les
plus courtes, sont profres dans
un style trs fulgurant. En tmoigne
par exemple la sourate al-Qamar
( la Lune , n 54). On y lit plusieurs reprises ce verset, qui revient
de manire lancinante : Oui, Nous
avons facilit la comprhension du
Coran en vue du rappel. Mais y a-t-il
quelquun pour sen souvenir ? . La
crise cologique que nous vivons actuellement serait annonce notamment par la sourate n 99, al-Zalzala,
Le tremblement de terre : Lorsque la Terre sera secoue par son
tremblement, lorsque la Terre rejettera ses fardeaux, lorsque lhomme
demandera : que lui arrive-t-il, la
terre ?, ce jour-l, elle racontera sa
propre histoire daprs ce que son
Seigneur lui aura rvl !
Citons encore la sourate 81,
al-Takwr, Lenroulement : Lorsque le soleil sera enroul [ou bien
66
de signes mineurs .
67
68
lun et lautre sexes. Ils mentionnent ants les plus solides, en accomplisgalement le dveloppement de sant des prodiges et des miracles.
lhomosexualit, surtout fminine. Sagit-il dun personnage, de plusLa licence sexuelle sera totale : Lor- ieurs personnes, dune entit colsque les gens copuleront au bord lective, dun tat desprit quil se
des routes ; Parmi les signes rpandrait dans le monde ? Des aude lHeure, figure la gnralisation teurs parlent cet gard de tadjl,
de ladultre . cela sajouterait un terme issu de la mme racine arabe
dsquilibre numrique entre les que Dajjl : il dsigne la subversion,
hommes et les femmes, lesquelles linversion sditieuse des valeurs.
devraient tre beaucoup plus nom- Diverses interprtations, bien sr, en
breuses en fin de cycle.
sont faites: puisquil est dcrit par le
Dans le domaine gopolitique, Prophte comme tant borgne ,
le dsordre est galement dcrit certains y voient lcran dInternet
comme gnralis. Les guerres fer- par exemple, ou la vision unidimenont beaucoup de morts, mais il sem- sionnelle, matrialiste, dans laquelle
ble quil ne sagisse pas
tant de guerres arme Jusqu' ces dernires annes, et
contre arme que de massacres, ce qui peut tre en tout cas avant le 11 septembre
interprt dans le sens 2001, la doctrine messianique de
de gnocides. Laccent est l'islam prenait la forme d'un enmis sur le grand nombre
seignement sotrique, restreint
de morts. On peut bien sr
penser aux deux guerres quelques milieux. Dsormais,
mondiales du XXe sicle, c'est devenu un tat d'esprit asaux victimes du nazisme, sez gnralis.
du fascisme et du sovitisme.
vit lhumanit actuelle, etc. Ce qui est
- Les signes majeurs :
sr, cest quil va personnifier, crisSelon beaucoup de savants talliser, la contre-initiation. Certains
et soufis musulmans, nous aurions avancent que la mouvance New Age,
dj pntr dans les signes ma- trs syncrtiste, un peu nave, mais
jeurs , lesquels dressent un vrita- aussi parfois manipule par cerble scnario o la guerre et la paix taines instances, vhicule dj cette
sentremlent. Les acteurs seraient contre-initiation. Ainsi, cette mouschmatiquement les suivants :
vance vous fait croire que la spira) lAntchrist : al-Dajjl, itualit cest tout beau et tout doux,
terme qui signifie en arabe alors que dans toutes les traditions
lImposteur : il va sduire les croy- spirituelles la spiritualit passe par
69
70
La fonction eschatologique
de Jsus est exprime ici sur un ton
prophtique par lmir Abdelkader
en 1852, dans un texte qui a t traduit en franais sous le nom de Lettre aux Franais :
71
72
73
74
tique suppose, un instant dtermin, avoir parcouru lhistoire politique des socits musulmanes et,
par extension, comme une thorie
politique propre lIslam. Indiscutablement, cette perception sest vue
renforce par linvocation ritre
par une majorit de mouvements et
de partis islamistes des textes sacrs
et de la jurisprudence (fiqh), mais
aussi des structures pr-modernes
de gouvernance dans la rgion, pour
appuyer la notion dinvitabilit de
l tat islamique, voire son caractre
impratif la restitution dune
grandeur de lIslam en large part
fantasme.
Il importe, au regard de
lattrait toujours aussi considrable
exerc par l tat islamique parmi
des pans entiers du monde sunnite, de se pencher sur les origi-
75
76
77
entre les sphres politique et religieuse, tel qunonc par la jurisprudence classique, ils nont fait,
en dfinitive, quinverser lordre de
ce dernier. De fait, les savants musulmans sunnites avaient forg ce
rapport afin dassurer une lgitimit
religieuse au pouvoir. Les islamistes,
pour leur part, maintiennent que
politique et religion ne peuvent tre
spars. Or, placs dans une position
de rsistance l tat arabe moderne, et non de lgitimation, ils nont
fait que politiser une certaine
acception de lIslam. Pour atteindre
leurs objectifs, ils se sont dailleurs
rvls plus innovateurs encore et
moins littraux dans leur lecture
des textes, invoquant certes le Coran
la source, mais de faon spectaculairement slective.
Aussi la prcdence politique nest-elle daucun intrt vritable leurs yeux, de mme que
le corpus jurisprudentiel pris dans
son entier4 , lexception de rfrences qui leur sont chres comme
Ibn Taymiyya, thologien et jurisconsulte hanbalite du XIIIe sicle.
Quelles sont ainsi les causes de cette
fusion opre, travers lHistoire,
entre Islam et tat, et qui a accouch de lide d tat islamique ? Une
rponse couramment apporte cette question consiste affirmer que
4 Tout en se revendiquant dun Islam des
origines , islamistes et jihadistes nont aucun mal emprunter des concepts et pratiques dautres dogmes, y compris chiite
comme sur la problmatique de la taqiyya,
par exemple, qui signifie la prudence
et dsigne la dissimulation de sa foi sous
la contrainte et/ou dans un milieu hostile.
78
Si lIslam est fermement ancr dans lide dune morale collective, il ne prte en revanche
que peu dattention au politique,
comme lillustrent ses sources qui
nexplicitent aucune des modalits
de formation dun tat ou de conduite dun gouvernement. Certes,
les premiers califes commandaient
spirituellement leur communaut,
mais pas parce que la religion en ellemme lexigeait. Cest mme plutt
le contraire : lIslam sest propag
dans des rgions dj dotes dune
tradition tatique, perse et byzantine en particulier, dont il a hrit.
Le seul fait dtre un musulman
dans les territoires conquis tait
trs valorisant sur le plan politique,
assurant aux fidles des positions
administratives et militaires de premier choix. Ce nest quavec lafflux
rapide et massif de musulmans en
provenance dArabie que les frustra-
79
80
Lapprhension islamique de
l tat mergea en temps de crise
politique et fut toute entire absorbe par lenjeu de sauver lumma
dun destin funeste ; ce faisant, elle
surinvestit son caractre religieux.
En incorporant artificiellement la
notion d tat au cur de la charia,
la jurisprudence envisagea une
utopie et non une ralit. Distille,
pour ne pas dire systmatise au fil
des sicles, cette fiction sest solidifie comme aspiration transmise
de gnration en gnration, plus
particulirement aprs la pntration coloniale europenne qui reste
81
82
the myriad blind passions that afflict it; passions that are corrosive
and inimical to any genuinely communal welfare:
3 The Collected Works of Shinran, tr. Dennis Hirota, Hisao Inagaki, Michio Tokunaga and Ryushin Uryuzu (Kyoto: Jdo Shinsh Hongwanji-ha, 1997), Vol.II, p.172
83
84
85
adequate as a vehicle for emancipation. In this way, the range of teachings available in Buddhism can be
viewed as complementary rather
than competing, thus removing the
sclerotic tendency to form fixed and
definitive views on spiritual matters
The Buddha aspires to benefit sentient
a major source of religious conflict.
beings by giving them a great realm of
This means that we ought to
ultimate purity, peace and sustenance.
acknowledge that any doctrinal forZonkaku8 mulation is only an approximation
of a reality that transcends it and
This diversity does not sug- which must always remain an inefgest that there is no bedrock in fable experience of the spirit. Doing
its teachings but, rather, that there so does not belittle the teachings as
are a core set of key insights which being only half-true, so to speak,
subtly tie together the variegated such as to vitiate their efficacy. On
threads of the Dharma. Adherence the contrary, this is assured by their
to them is not necessarily insisted having emerged from the realm of
upon as a dogmatic requirement but truth and light which were revealed
is a natural outcome of reflecting on to the Buddha in his enlightenment
the truths of human existence. This experience.
latitude in belief acts as a foil to funThe Buddha regards universal existence
damentalism in that it points to the
with detached Wisdom and impartial
incompleteness or relativity of any
Compassion. The aim of his teaching
single doctrinal viewpoint, while
and method is liberation from all parstressing that each one is perfectly
battles, vying for control of the orders considerable wealth and property. In the 1970s,
ethnic Lao Buddhist monks actively supported militant violence directed against the
countrys communists. One can also point to
the support given by a number of prominent
Buddhist authorities for Japans militarisation during the second world war as well as
the assassination plot, known as The League
of Blood incident in 1932, which was led by
a Buddhist monk. Numerous violent episodes
have also been documented in the history of
Tibetan Buddhism where competing sects
have engaged in brutal clashes and summary
executions over hundreds of years.
8 Alfred Bloom (ed.), The Shin Buddhist Classical Tradition: A Reader in Pure Land Teaching
(Volume 1) (Bloomington: World Wisdom,
2013), p.119.
86
87
88
10 Alfred Bloom (ed.), The Shin Buddhist Classical Tradition: A Reader in Pure Land Teaching
(Volume 2) (Bloomington: World Wisdom,
2014), p.24.
89
This world is a place full of disagreeable affairs, stealing, war, anger, hunger,
desire. But the other shore is Nirvna,
beyond karma; it is true peace, freedom
and happiness so, naturally, we look
for the Other Shore In this world, we
cannot obtain true freedom there
are always obstructions. Our life is temporary, not permanent, and we do not
have true peace.
Hozen Seki12
90
great faiths can assent a joint attempt to affirm peace in the world
that is none other than a peace that
reflects, for Buddhists at least, the
beatitude of Nirvna that lies at the
heart of reality and which seeks to
bring all beings to the highest good.
Whether we can ascend to
such an exalted realisation remains
highly uncertain. If we prove that we
are unable to do so, what can be assured is the slow but inevitable disintegration of human dignity and the
abandonment of its most noble ideals.
91
Buddhist Perspective
on Conflict Resolution
Daisaku Ikeda
Arnold J. Toynbee, one of
the most highly respected historians of the twentieth century, once
observed that glimpses of the real
world are gleanings of priceless
value.1
When we review the record of
human history from the ancient past
to the present, although it is true
that all too many of the events on the
timeline involve conflict and war, at
the same time we cannot overlook
1 Toynbee, Arnold. 1958. East to West: A Journey Round the World. New York and London:
Oxford University Press. 221.
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
mothers and fathers when something befalls their child is the same.
I believe that the most effective means of breaking the cycles of
violence and hatredthe problems
of truly grave and challenging conditionscan be found in establishing throughout human society the
ethos of viewing things in the light
of empathy. This is the foundation
on which to build a society in which
true and meaningful solidarity is extended to people suffering as a result of armed conflict, human rights
abuses and discrimination.
The will to coexistence
99
100
6 Trans. from Nichiren. 1952. Nichiren Daishonin gosho zenshu [The Complete Works of
Nichiren Daishonin]. Ed.by Nichiko Hori. Tokyo: Soka Gakkai. 761.
101
102
103
I founded, has as its motto, dialogue of civilizations for global citizenship. To date, it has organized
conferences on such shared human challenges as: strengthening
the United Nations, the abolition
of nuclear weapons, disarmament,
conflict resolution, human security,
multiculturalism, food security and
climate change. One of the unique
features of the Toda Institutes work
is that it seeks to form networks of
research collaboration around each
of these challenges, thus bringing
the worlds finest wisdom to bear on
them.
This past February, to commemorate its twentieth anniversary,
the Institute organized a conference,
with the participation of researchers from different religious backgroundsChristianity, Judaism, Islam and Buddhismto consider the
role of the worlds religions in contributing to peace.
The keynote address was delivered by Ms. Sihem Bensedrine,
president of the Truth and Dignity
Commission of Tunisia. In a separate
interview, she shared the following
thoughts: When different religions
gather to consider the same issues,
because they seek to respond to the
kinds of needs that are common to
all human beings, they are required
to become humble. And this humility is the opposite of absolutism.9
At nearly the same time, the
9 Trans. from Seikyo Shimbun. 2016. Bunmeikan taiwa ninau chi no kyoten [Intellectual
hub for dialogue of civilizations]. February 19.
3.
104
New Reality:
Peace and Universal Responsibility,
according to the Dalai Lama
Sofia Stril-Rever
Winning peace
105
combines the deep study of the mysteries of classical Buddhist philosophy, in the Nalanda2 tradition, with
knowledge in high tech fields of contemporary thought.
As a spiritual leader, the Dalai
Lama never ceases to hammer out
that praying is not enough to face
the violence caused by war. Since
human action is the cause, asking
God to intervene makes no sense.
Supporting a pragmatic realism, the
leader of the Tibetans analyzes the
widespread brainwashing that leads
us to accept a martial logic in the
name of the State. And he appeals
to us to closely examine the reality
of war in order to understand why
wars are perpetuated, as if we had
not learnt from our failures in the
past.
Most of us have been conditioned to
regard military combat as exciting and
glamorous an opportunity for men to
prove their competence and courage.
Since armies are legal, we feel that war
is acceptable; in general, nobody feels
that war is criminal or that accepting
it is criminal attitude. In fact, we have
106
War is like a fire in the human community, one whose fuel is living beings. I
find this analogy especially appropriate and useful. Modern warfare waged
primarily with different forms of fire,
but we are so conditioned to see it as
thrilling that we talk about this or that
marvelous weapon as a remarkable
piece of technology without remembering that, if it is actually used, it will burn
living people. War also strongly resembles a fire in the way it spreads. If one
area gets weak, the commanding officer
sends in reinforcements.
This is throwing live people onto a fire.
But because we have been brainwashed
to think this way, we do not consider
the suffering of individual soldiers. No
soldiers want to be wounded or die.
None of his loved ones wants any harm
to come to him. If one soldier is killed,
or maimed for life, at least another five
or ten people his relatives and friends
suffer as well. We should all be horrified by the extent of this tragedy, but we
are too confused.3
The Kalachakra Mandala is the essential teaching of the Dalai Lamas lineage. The mandala symbolizes the interdependence and mutual reliance between all beings, human and non human, in the web of existence. Its meditation, based on inner peace and compassion, is an experience of being one
with the univsersal life.
107
108
was the price he had to pay for succeeding in his flight to reach beyond
the Himalayas. But he was not deprived. Lacking material goods, he
had within him treasures of wisdom, love, and compassion, nurtured since childhood. In the Potala
lamasery, he had practiced handling
weapons that dismantle all weapons, weapons that prepare for the
victory of peace.
The military occupation of
Tibet to the benefit of the Chinese
nation , the violation of human
rights, the plundering of natural resources, the forced sinicization of
the inhabitants, and demographic
attacks are painful and unbearable.
The Dalai Lama has not ceased denouncing them, for more than fifty
years, to the community of nations.
But though the International Commission of Jurists has acknowledged
the Tibetan genocide on three occasions, in 1959, 1961 and 1965,5
no serious measure has been taken
against China who is part of the Security Council of the UN. And if the
Dalai Lama has succeeded in mobilizing consciousnesses, he has not
been supported by the states that
could have put an end to the drama
experienced by his people.
Would that mean that democratic values and human rights are
helpless in front of the economic
power, and the massive strike force,
of the Chinese state whose army
the most numerous in the world is
5 Cf. My Appeal to The World, the Dalai
Lama and Sofia Stril-Rever, Hay House
International, 2015, part I, pp. 19-46
109
110
it is very difficult to assess such matters with any degree of accuracy. War is
violence and violence is unpredictable.
Therefore, it is better to avoid it if possible, and never to presume that we know
beforehand whether the outcome of a
particular war will be beneficial or not.
111
an object can only be defined as existing if the consciousness of an observer identifies it.
Understanding those three
levels of interdependence is not only
an intellectual task. For it challenges
the whole range of our relations to
the world, and to others. The more
progress we make in experiencing
interdependence, the clearer it becomes that we cannot just perceive
external phenomenon as self-sufficient entities endowed with intrinsic characteristics, separated from
the subject. From a self that, through
contact with external objects, would
develop powerful dualistic reflexes
of appropriation and rejection, we
move on to a self that engages in a
flowing interaction with others and
our environment.
Understanding interdependence progressively abolishes dualistic apprehension, and destroys the
barriers that we set up around us,
in an erroneous understanding of
reality. We then gain access to fundamental benevolence, since in this
relation of interdependence to all
forms of life, we feel directly concerned by their wellness and their
suffering.
A correct realization of interdependence correlates with the idea
that caring for others, also means
caring for oneself. General interest,
and personal interest merge and
amplify in the context of widespread
globalization we are witnessing, in
which each local event has a worldwide repercussion. The conflicts that
112
10 Ibid. p. 43.
11 Ibid. p. 23.
113
114
115
116
I become aware of the fact that the wellbeing of all living beings depends on
the balance of ecosystems, themselves
dependent on the peace in the hearts
of men, and the spirit of justice in human societies where no one must be rejected, disabled by hunger, poverty, and
destitution. In a spirit of equanimity,
free from bias, attachment and hatred,
I contribute to maintaining, and restoring, harmony in life.
Living peace and inner healing in each
one of my actions, devoted to the wellbeing of all lives, human and non-human, is a great appeal to being alive, in
the joy of universal love which is the life
of life.
________________________________________
Translated by Patrick Laude. This article first appeared in its original French version in Tmoignage
chrtien on April 30, 1948.
117
been evacuated by force into Leba- place, alone in the press of Paris, last
non since 1947.
December 12, it was not only lacking
We are blas with respect to in good politics, but impious, to condeportations! Many diplomats place sider a "partition" of Palestine, folthe salvation of the world in a sys- lowing a "partition" of India under
tematic "resettlement" of inconven- the pretext of total pacification. Inient minorities, as a generalization ternational salvation lies elsewhere.
of concentration camps on a global
We Christians, as Pius XI put
scale, final uprooting of "displaced it, are and must become more "spirpersons", metamorphosis of the pil- itually Semites."
grims of Eretz Isral into pioneers of
This is not in order to poison a
a technological colonization that re- territorial duel between two Semitic
expediate Arabs to the desert.
people who are brothers in AbraGod knows, however, the ris- ham, the Jews and the Arabs. But it is
ing, inexpiable hatred that one hears in order to quicken within ourselves
rising against these methods that the meditation of the Holy Scriptures
the USSR borrowed from Nazism, which they have received, in order to
the clamor for justice from exiled engage ourselves, we ill-evangelized
Galician, Baltic, Romanian, Crimean and Cherkess
people.
Israel should help Islam to deNo sensible human fend this poverty of the believer
being should found the return of Isral to its origi- in the true God of Abraham, the
nal land on the exile of a pure cult of His transcendent
Christian Arab minority, jealousy, instead of inviting it to
nor a fortiori on that of a
blaspheme as it does by making
Muslim Arab majority of
12,000,000 souls who is of the Holy Land the stakes of a
kin by language and reli- duel among oil tankers.
gion to all the bordering
Eastern states. There has
always been, in Palestine, nomadic, people who have relapsed into the
in small transhumance and seden- idolatry of gold and flesh divinized
tary Arabs and among them, always by the liturgy of our stock exchanges
every Christian should remember and our theatres, to commit to the
it more than one-twelfth Chris- true vocation of baptized nations,
tians, i.e., 100,000 souls, many more that from which the Crusades have
than the number of Hebrews who quickly deviated, pushing the love of
remained in 1917.
gain to the criminal ransack of ConAs I announced it in this very stantinople in 1204.
118
119
uniform.
And still, if the said president,
from the very beginning of the sacrilegious conflict, had understood,
he would have come by plane, with
his dictaphone and his secretaries,
to Jerusalem, he would have taken
abode in a house, mined or not, to
preside, reconcile or die. And had
he been killed, like Gandhi, he would
have, by a powerful death, broken
the impetus of hatred toward partition.
The Arabs, one can feel it,
would accept the exiles of Exodus,
if this gesture were not to re-open an
immigration that overwhelms them;
Machiavelism, when it is revealed in
the light of day, is no more profitable; could not one try to love one another, in a charity that would not be
commiseration, nor hypocritical, nor
tactical, between Christians, Jews
and Muslims, agreeing in theory on
this first commandment of the law?
The fear of the hour alone, to
which we come closer every day, the
fear of a general reckoning, the sessions of which will take lace precisely in Jerusalem, could persuade us.
The Palestinian problem is a
key test, the British political ruses
have broken their teeth upon it by
evading for twenty-five years the International Commission on the Holy
Sites decided in San Remo (article
13-14 of the mandate). This Commission must not only rule on the
dusting turns of the sacred thresholds, for religions are not archeological ruins, but living stones in front
120
Rigveda 1:164:46
Qur'n 5:481
1 See Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Caner K. Dagli, Maria Massi Dakake, Joseph E.B. Lumbard and
Mohammed Rustom (eds.), The Study Quran:
A New Translation and Commentary (New
York, NY: HarperCollins, 2015).
121
122
123
124
125
126
The clash is in many ways polarized by the extremism of antireligious secularism and religious
fundamentalism. When considered
in a larger context, the rise of modernism that gave birth to secularism has created a void in the human
collectivity heavily impacting the
religions themselves. This vacuum
has created an imbalance which religious fundamentalism, and New Age
spirituality for that matter, attempt
to fill. Although religious fundamentalism emerged to defend itself from
the threats of anti-religious secularism, it has totally lost sight of what
religion is and has become in fact a
betrayal to religion.17
127
128
23 Ibid. p. 446.
24 Hopi Elders, quoted in Frank Waters, Book of
the Hopi: The First Revelation of the Hopis Historical and Religious Worldview of Life (New
York, NY: Penguin Books, 1977), p. 7.
25 Ibid. p. 7.
It is in returning to what is
unanimous across the faiths of all
times and places that we can properly situate the theme of religious pluralism and human diversity. Prior to
the modern and postmodern world
and the emergence of secularism,
the linkage between religion and the
26 Leo Schaya, Some Universal Aspects of Judaism, in Universal Aspects of the Kabbalah and
Judaism, ed. Roger Gaetani (Bloomington, IN:
World Wisdom, 2014), p. 10.
129
human collectivities was more explicit due to their isolation from one
another, which sharply contrasts
with the scenario that we find today.
A common misnomer is that race
suggests uniformity within a specific
cultural or ethnic group. Nevertheless, race itself does not automatically imply psychological homogeneity within a human collectivity, for
race allows for certain psychological
dissimilarities to also exist. To indiscriminately lump different races and
ethnicities together assuming that
they are all the same is to do them a
grave injustice.
For thousands of years already, humanity has been divided into several fundamentally different branches, which constitute so many complete humanities,
more or less closed in on themselves ...
[T]his is not always a question of race,
but more often of human groups, very
diverse perhaps, but none the less subject to mental conditions which, taken
as a whole, make of them sufficiently
homogeneous spiritual recipients.27
130
29 Leo Schaya, Contemplation of the Divine Aspects, in The Universal Meaning of the Kabbalah, trans. Nancy Pearson (Secaucus, NJ:
University Books, 1971), p. 57.
30 Patrul Rinpoche, The difficulty of finding the
freedoms and advantages, in The Words of My
Perfect Teacher, trans. Padmakara Translation
Group (New York, NY: HarperCollins Publishers, 1994), p. 7.
31 Frithjof Schuon, The Meaning of Race, in
Castes and Races, trans. Marco Pallis and D.M.
Matheson (Bedfont, Middlesex, UK: Perennial
Books, 1982), p. 60.
ethnicity or religion. The Qur'n informs us that, He created you [humanity] from a single soul (39:6),
which reflects the spiritual message
of the First Peoples, We are all one
in nature.32 While human individuals have a common origin, this does
not undermine their uniqueness in
the Divine: No two individuals are
identical.33 analogously no two
individuals occupy the same stage
of development.34 The many ways
to the Divine belong to the diversity of human types, Infinite are the
sdhans..35 Likewise, the Sufi adage points out, [T]here are as many
paths to God as there are human
souls.36 According to a well-known
adth human similarity is affirmed:
People are as equal as the teeth
of a comb. And yet according to a
Qur'nic verse, human diversity is
also emphasized: And among His
signs is the creation of the heavens
and the earth and the [diversity]
variation in your tongues and colors.
32 Luther Standing Bear, Hunter, Scout, Warrior, in Land of the Spotted Eagle (Lincoln, NE:
University of Nebraska Press, 2006), p. 45.
33 Alain Danilou, Hinduism and Human Behavior, in India, A Civilization of Differences:
The Ancient Tradition of Universal Tolerance,
trans. Kenneth Hurry, ed. Jean-Louis Gabin
(Rochester, VT: Inner Traditions, 2005), p. 9.
34 Alain Danilou, Introduction, to Yoga: Mastering the Secrets of Matter and the Universe
(Rochester, VT: Inner Traditions, 1991), p. 6.
35 nandamay M, quoted in The Essential r
nandamay M: Life and Teachings of a 20th
Century Indian Saint, trans. tmnanda, ed.
Joseph A. Fitzgerald (Bloomington, IN: World
Wisdom, 2007), p. 62.
36 Quoted in Frithjof Schuon, The Eye of the
Heart: Metaphysics, Cosmology, Spiritual Life
(Bloomington, IN: World Wisdom Books,
1997), p. 121.
131
132
133
approaches to human diversity recognize the uniqueness and importance of the many colors of the rainbow, they overlook the most vital
facet, the uncolored light prior to its
refraction which is the source of the
distinctive varieties of human beings
and their faith traditions. By restoring human diversity to its sacred origins we can authentically recognize
and celebrate the indwelling Spirit
found in all of the unique human beings and their corresponding religions. The timeless wisdom reminds
us that if the human microcosm is
at peace, it will reverberate into the
macrocosm. We conclude with a traditional Hindu mantra for invoking
peace throughout all levels of Reality
since the beginning of this temporal
cycle: Om, Shnti, Shnti, Shnti and
correspondingly a verse from the
Islamic revelation at the end of the
calycle, O you who believe! Invoke
blessings upon him, and greetings of
peace! (Qur'n 33:56)
134
________________________________________
Harijan, 3-3-'46, p. 29, quoted in "The Discipline of Prayer" by Pyarelal Nayyar.
135
136
137
138
States today wanted a scrubbed image of the U.S. which existed in their
minds before all these new liberal
ideas. If the 1960s lead us into exile
because of womens liberation, civil
rights movement, people of color,
immigrants, so-called illegals caused
our destruction some may feel that
getting back to the good old days is
what we need. It is important to recognize that the good old days never
existed for much of the US as mansions and summer homes that had
20 bedrooms may have been the
life of a few but not reality for the
nation. The Chronicler may also be
addressing such people who may
have wanted the good old life back
again. The Chronicler encouraged
the people to move forward rather
than backwards and to focus on rebuilding the temple. It is the temple
which will bring all the key players
together, the exiled and those who
remained.
The book of Chronicles6 is inspired by the events of Israels exile in Babylon and the subsequent
return. In trying to recount these
events, Chronicles reconstructs a
cultural memory of the people of Israel. The exile and the return represent far more than theological
metaphors. From the beginning to
end, these traumatic events ordered
all of Israels past into a tension between two fundamental experienc6 In the Hebrew tradition, the book of Chronicles
is a single book, placed at the end of the Jewish Bible, the last book of the Kethuvim. See
Adele Berlin and Marc Zvi Brettler, The Jewish
Study Bible, Tanakh Translation (Oxford, UK:
Oxford University Press, 1999) 1712.
139
140
a wall built from the remaining metal landing scraps of the Gulf War, a
wall that expanded the role of the
militarys use of metal. The border
has become militarized with patrols
who treat migrants as prisoners.
It symbolizes militarization, xenophobia, hatred, pride and fear of
the other, a reminder of wanting to
protect what is yours and not sharing what God has given you. Walls
continue to go up as the American
people continue to fear that the migrants will take away the jobs. There
is an enormous amount of fear of the
other which may poison the lives of
the poor in both countries.
The walls went up in 1994
between the Mexican and U.S. border after the establishment of the
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) which was intended
to help with trade and the economic
status of Mexico. However, it backfired and made the economic situation worse for the Mexicans. It was
only the rich corporations and companies that benefited from the Free
Trade Agreement as they were able
to move their factories to Mexico
where the labor was cheap and profits higher. What Americans fail to
recognize is that the undocumented
people do not cross the border to
steal, to create problems, to fight or
to murder, but to find jobs to provide for their families back home.
Therefore, we need to rethink our
border policies. Many Americans
have actually begun to call the migrants clutter and have reduced
141
them to jetsum. As we ponder walls This wall is under constant surveiland the devastation caused by build- lance to prevent people from entering them, we have come to recognize ing into the U.S. illegally.
that we cant continue building walls
The Korean peninsula is anto separate us from others. We need other example of a place that is dito replace them with prudent friend- vided by a great wall/barrier at the
ship.
38th parallel. The divided border
A few years ago, I took a class is called the DMZ: a demilitarized
to Mexico-U.S. border through Bor- zone, created in 1953, after Korea
derLinks, an organization that pro- was separated into two countries by
vides educational experiences to the United States and the Soviet Unconnect divided communities, raise ion at the end of World War II. This
awareness about border and immi- division continues to generate fear
gration policies and their impact, and hostility.
and inspires people to act for social
I have visited the DMZ sevtransformation. We visited the metal eral times; the last time I took two
wall that separates the
United States from Mexico In the midst of horror, God travat Nogales, Mexico.
els into exile and returns with us.
Rich corporations
and companies that benefited from the Free Trade Agreement of my three children to see it. They
as they were able to move their fac- are too young to remember the visit,
tories down to Mexico where labor but every time I visit the DMZ I am
was cheap and profits higher. As the overcome with emotion. The deveconomy of Mexico suffered, more astation of families separated, lives
people made their way, without doc- lost, friendships broken, and a counuments, to the United States to seek try torn apart. It is a sign of despair,
work so they could support their hatred, sadness, anger, division, and
families.
hopelessness.
In 2006, the United States reAt the border, there is a metal
sponded with the Secure Fence Act. fence that divides the road traveling
As President George W. Bush signed into the DMZ. Hundreds of letters,
the bill, he stated, This bill will help notes, flowers, and trinkets are woprotect the American people. This ven into the fence, left by families
bill will make our borders more se- and strangers to express the pain
cure. It is an important step toward and longing that each person feels.
immigration reform. The act includ- Koreans want the two Koreas to
ed provisions for the construction of unite so that the wall can be dismanphysical barriers-walls-and the use tled and families reunited. Brokenof technology to forward these ends. ness needs to be healed.
142
143
144
Conclusion
We may need to reflect on how
to repair relationships that we have
damaged or have created to be out
of balance. Maintaining such imbalanced relations with African, Asian,
Latin American and Middle Eastern
clients creates the impulses which
drive citizens of those clients into
the hands of terrorist organizations,
because they see no other escape or
means of relief. As leaders within
our own community or church, we
need to examine where the walls of
relationship have crumbled and how
to delicately repair them.
As we think about walls and
other barriers, we recognize that for
such walls to come down we need to
repair the damaged and broken relationships that built them in the first
place. The hostility between the two
Koreas needs to end. Peace needs
to be restored on this tiny peninsula, my homeland. Walls can be torn
downwalls that separate us from
each other and keep families apart.
As we endeavor in this work, our
fears and hatred of the other need to
be abolished. Communication, dialogue, trust, and mutuality need to
be restored or created, where it has
never been.
In the story of Chronicles,
God never abandoned as the people
thought that God did during the exile. The temple was gone and the exiled were taken away, but God never
abandoned the people. Chronicles
is talking to a community who has
145
146
147
________________________________________
All quotations from His Highness the Aga Khan are excerpted, with thanks, from the official Aga Khan
Development Network website (http://www.akdn.org/speeches) and, on occasion, from the online
archive known as NanoWisdoms (http://www.nanowisdoms.org/nwblog). Some of the speeches
cited in this article are also excerpted from the publication Where Hope Takes Root: Democracy and
Pluralism in an Interdependent World by His Highness the Aga Khan, introduction by the Rt. Hon. Adrienne Clarkson, 2008 by Aga Khan Foundation Canada, published by Douglas & McIntyre Ltd. (hereafter cited as Where Hope Takes Root).
148
One quietly influential, moderate Muslim leader who has addressed the issue of the fragmentation of our times, and whose
149
150
As the Amman protocol indicates, the Ismaili approach is predicated on harmonizing the outer
(zahiri) and inner (batini) realities
through an intellectual and principial approach guided by the Ismaili Imam. This occurs through a
reciprocal relationship whereby Ismailis pledge allegiance (bayah) to
their Imam, who in turn guides them
through the exercise of his talim and
tawil, that is, his intellectual-moral
and principial-exegetical authority in conformity to spiritual principles (Usul ad-Din) and the traditions
of Islam, adapted according to the
needs of the changing times.
Underlying Principles
151
152
153
154
15
From The Spiritual Roots of Tolerance,
speech made at the Tutzing Evangelical Academy, upon receiving the Tolerance Prize, 20
May 2006; Where Hope Takes Root, p.124, at
p.125.
say in one of the most inspiring references to mankind, that Allah has created all mankind from one soul?
This single ethical framework is a reflection both of the unitive holistic vision that is central to
faith, and of the social conscience
that is its ethical imperative. As His
Highness has underlined, Islam is
a faith of tolerance, generosity and
spirituality18, and these three elements are interlinked. It is by virtue
of our shared spiritual patrimony
To the Imamat, the meaning of quality that tolerance and generosity are inof life extends to the entire ethical and cumbent on us as human beings; tolsocial context in which people live, and erance being a reflection of spiritual
not only to their material well-being integrity, and generosity an expresmeasured over generation after gen- sion of social conscience. Thus, the
eration. Consequently, the Imamats is a Aga Khan has observed,
16 The Delegation of the Ismaili Imamat Foundation Stone Ceremony (Ottawa, Canada) 6 June
2005.
155
156
A fundamental attribute of
the cosmopolitan ethic is a readiness to accept the complexity of human society.25 Elaborating on this,
and on the spiritual roots of tolerance, the Aga Khan has stated,
157
while the latter can result in ghettos and conflicts. This balancing task
is vitally important because, as His
Highness has noted, every time pluralism fails, in one way or the other
it ends up in conflict.29
Yet, he laments that the modern world has not responded well to
this challenge:
29 CBC Interview, One-on-One with Peter Mansbridge (Toronto, Canada) 1 March 2014.
30 Address to both Houses of the Parliament of
Canada in the House of Commons Chamber
(Ottawa, Canada) 27 February 2014.
158
31 Prime Minister Orbns statement was published in September 2015 in the German
newspaper, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.
It stated, Let us not forget, however, that
those arriving have been raised in another
religion, and represent a radically different
culture. Most of them are not Christians, but
Muslims. This is an important question, because Europe and European identity is rooted
in Christianity. Is it not worrying in itself that
European Christianity is now barely able to
keep Europe Christian? If we lose sight of this,
the idea of Europe could become a minority
159
Social Justice
160
161
tic media, the potential of civil society, and a genuine democratic ethic. 43
The role of civil society (an
array of institutions which operate on a private, voluntary basis,
but are motivated by high public
purposes44) is vital in this regard.
It is an aspect of what His Highness
has termed the enabling environment that is necessary to promote
social justice. Leading by example,
the AKDNs work in partnership
with private groups, NGOs and government organizations, has engaged
in a vast range of projects from
building hospitals, universities and
educational academies worldwide,
to assisting with strategies such as
microfinance in rural areas, and to
reviving cultures as a trampoline
for progress in order to improve
the quality of peoples lives globally, not only in areas populated by
Ismailis. And as Imam, the Aga Khan
has emphasized to his followers the
importance of serving one's fellow
human beings, and of generosity, as
an aspect of living the ethics of one's
faith.
An Integral Vision
162
trate not only the essentially peaceful message of the faith but also the
perennial and universal relevance
of its principles and values as exemplified in His Highness integral and
pluralistic vision. It is a vision of a
lived faith of engagement with life
through creating a bridge between
faith and the world, a bridge of
hope that places value in community while respecting individual aspirations, and that embraces diversity
while remaining true to the principles of faith.
163
chive/great-didactic/index.html].
164
3 School of Infancy, pp. 60-61. Comenius publicly stated idealization of children was quite
1995)p. 49.
4 Infancy, p.90.
165
166
tle flower begins to unfold and distinguish things11 will inevitably lead
back to God. The seeds of learning,
virtue and piety are naturally implanted in children because children
are the image of God, therefore they
are capable of acquiring knowledge
of all things created by God.12 "There
is nothing in heaven or earth or in
the waters, nothing in the abyss under the earth, nothing in the human
body, nothing in the soul, nothing in
Holy Writ, nothing in the arts, nothing in politics, nothing in the Church,
of which the little candidates for
wisdom shall be wholly ignorant."13
Or, to paraphrase Gregory of Neziansus, an Eastern Church Father cited
by Comenius in The Dedication to
the Reader of The Great Didactic, mans mind is perfectly matched to
the world, it is the mind which gives
the world its unity.14
Yet, the very institutions
meant to hone and advance reason are one of the main sources for
11 Ibid., p.112
12 The Great Didactic Online, Chapter 5, The
Seeds of These Three are Naturally Implanted in Us. [http://studentzone.roehampton.
ac.uk/library/digital-collection/froebel-archive/great-didactic/index.html]. By positing
that the key to knowledge of the created world
lies in humans God-given reason Comenius
displays that synthesis of science and faith
which differentiates him from the other two
great revolutionaries in Western thought of
his time, Descartes and Pascal; the former
excluding God from his scientific method, the
later forsaking science in his quest for faith.
13 J.E.Hutton, History of the Moravian Church.
Chapter XI, Comenius and the Hidden Seed,
[http://biblehub.com/library/hutton/history_of_the_moravian_church/index.html].
14 The
Great
Didactic
Online.
Greetings to the Reader, Subsection 5.
167
16 Ibid., p.84.
17 Ibid., p.91.
18 Spinka, Pansophic Principles: 156.
19 The Great Didactic Online, Chapter 25.
168
20 Infancy, p.20.
21 Matter comes first, form follows, things are
essential, words accidental, things are the
body, while words the garment The Great
Didactic Online, Chapter 16. The Universal Requirements of Teaching, Subsection 15. Natural Order.
169
170
171
172
aime souligner les dfauts des religions traditionnelles, commencer par leur implication directe ou
Depuis le XVIIIe sicle au indirecte dans toutes sortes de
moins, la modernit occidentale violences. "Fanatisme", "obscurant-
173
174
refltent aussi les socits et les individus qui les ont vu natre et auxquels elles s'adressent et s'adaptent.
Elles sont donc marques par les
violences qui caractrisent ces derniers ; violences propres la nature
humaine, que les religions tentent
tant bien que mal de rguler, orienter ou transmuter, selon la logique
du "moindre mal" (voire de la "concidence des opposs", notamment
moraux, ds qu'il est question de
l'Absolu divin). Les religions luttent
ainsi contre la violence, mais lui laissent faute de mieux une certaine
place, temporaire, en faisant preuve
de ralisme et de pragmatisme envers ce bas monde et ses habitants,
marqus par le pch. Une vision
laquelle s'apparente, par exemple, la
thorie mimtique de Ren Girard,
selon lequel les "sacr archaque"
vient rguler la violence diffuse qui
menace la socit, en la concentrant
priodiquement sur un "bouc missaire", gnralement innocent de
cette violence. D'o un maintien de
l'ordre social fond sur cette injustice cyclique, sorte de mal ncessaire anthropologique minimal, de
tragdie civilisationnelle (qui trouverait, selon Ren Girard, sa rsolution uniquement travers la "bonne
nouvelle" chrtienne).
3) Charriant toutes sortes de
contenus culturels divers et de normes contradictoires accumuls au fil
des sicles, les religions qui sont les
plus vieilles institutions culturelles
du monde contiennent le pire et le
meilleur. Etant en cela incohrentes
175
176
Devant les hcatombes sans pr- t employs comme des quasicdent dues aux idologies mod- synonymes ; pensons par exemple
ernes que sont les nationalismes la distinction occidentale claset les totalitarismes (nazisme, sta- sique entre "lautorit spirituelle"
linisme, maosme), une telle ar- (en loccurrence religieuse, puisquil
gumentation interpelle. Rcentes sagit de lEglise catholique) et le
l'chelle historique, ces idologies "pouvoir temporel" (monarchique,
ne prirent-elle pas toujours les re- imprial, etc.) L'usage conduisant
ligions pour cibles, ou, pire encore, nanmoins spcialiser peu peu
pour instruments ?
le terme "spirituel" pour dsigner
Ne disposant pas de l'espace ce qui a plus spcifiquement rapsuffisant pour analyser ces diff- port avec l'au-del, le surnaturel, le
rentes problmatiques comme il le Divin, au sein mme du religieux,
faudrait, on peut nanmoins clair- peru comme une ralit plus comer l'une des questions centrales qui posite, la jonction de ce "pur spirles runit, savoir celle des dfini- ituel" et du "temporel" (profane,
tions respectives du
politique, du religieux et des rapports Le socio-politique, le religieux et le
qu'ils
entretien- spirituel forment un continuum et
nent, notamment eu sont insparables, comme le sont le
gard la question
corps, l'me et l'esprit dans un ordu pouvoir et de la
violence. Ce qui im- ganisme humain vivant.
plique d'utiliser une
troisime notion, en
lui donnant un sens prcis : le spir- mondain, terrestre, sculier, social),
ituel.
comme on va le voir dans un instant.
Le "spirituel" apparaissant ainsi en
Dfinir, distinguer et articuler
quelque sorte comme la dimension
trois notions : le religieux, le spir- la plus mystique du religieux, car diituel et le politique
rectement en rapport avec le Divin,
labsolu, linfini et pour cela la plus
"Spirituel" est un mot r- dgage des contraintes sociales et
gulirement utilis, le plus souvent politiques.
sans conceptualisation, dans un flou
Pour sortir de cet tat
qui constitue certainement lune des d'indtermination, nous faisons les
explications de son succs. De fait, hypothses suivantes :
"religieux" et les termes de sa famille
1) On ne peut dfinir rigd'une part, et "spirituel" et ceux de oureusement le religieux quen tenla sienne d'autre part, ont longtemps sion/articulation avec deux autres
177
178
179
180
181
182
11
Fondation Weltethos : http://www.globalethic-now.de
183
184
185
186
Conclusion
Eclairant, rchauffant et humanisant toutes les civilisations
depuis toujours, le ''feu sacr''15 du
religieux peut aussi incendier, consumer et dtruire parfois, sans
qu'on puisse vraiment savoir si ces
embrasements priodiques sont
propres la nature violente de ce
dernier, qui se trouverait ainsi rvle ; ou bien rsultent de drives
soit endognes, soit exognes issues des instrumentalisations, rcuprations et manipulations du religieux par le politique (et d'autres
intrts, conomiques en particulier). Contrairement aux conceptions
dominant la modernit occidentale,
il semble bien en tout cas que le
lien du religieux et du politique ne
soit pas ni contingent, ni optionnel,
mais soit au contraire ncessaire ; et
qu'il se concrtise par la mme d'une
faon ou d'une autre, que l'on approuve ou condamne cet tat de fait.
Ce qui signifie, hlas sans doute, que
le religieux possde des rapports
structurels avec la violence; soit du
fait de sa nature propre, soit en raison de ce lien avec le politique, luimme vou au maintien de l'ordre
l'intrieur des socits ou entre ces
dernires, autrement dit l'usage
tendanciel de la force.
Mais souligner l'insparabilit
du politique et du religieux ne revient pas la rduction de l'un
l'autre (ce qui reviendrait confon15 Expression de Rgis Debray, cf. son livre
Le Feu sacr : fonctions du religieux, Paris :
Fayard, 2003.
187
188
189
Book Reviews
Subverting Hatred: The Challenge of Nonviolence in Religious Traditions, ed. Daniel L. Smith-Christopher (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis
Books, 2007). xxvii, 210pp, $20.00. Tenth Anniversary Edition.
190
the Hindu tradition concerning ahimsa, Islams al-jihad al akbar (the Greater Struggle), and the Jainist advocacy for peace are all enduring insights that
can contribute to peace, harmony, and justice. This book amplifies the challenges of peacebuilding in all religious traditions. Using sacred texts, theologies, histories, traditions, and practices; it is a compendium of the rich
legacy of nonviolence in religious traditions.
The ten chapters in the book cover Buddhism, Jainism, Confucianism and Daoism, Hinduism, Indigenous Traditions, Islam, Judaism, and
Christianity. It opens with a powerful foreword by Daisaku Ikeda, Founder,
Boston Research Center for the 21st Century and the President of the Soka
Gakkai International and concludes with an epilogue by Donald K. Swearer.
The books editor, Daniel Smith-Christopher teaches theological studies and
directs the Peace Studies program at Loyola Marymount University in Los
Angeles. In his introduction, he sets out the rationale of the book. According to him, the main purpose of Subverting Hatred is an invitation to reflect
on religious traditions in the context of the current debates about violence
and nonviolence, and to offer resources from within religious traditions that
would support a nonviolent approach to pressing issues(p.xxiii).
Typical of most edited books, the chapters in Subverting Hatred are
uneven in terms of their depth and critical dimension. This is one of the
pitfalls of an edited volume. However, this dimension does not diminish its
value for contemplating useful models for peacemaking and justice. It is a
wonderful collection of essays on what Michel Foucault called a reverse
narrative that would refute the tendency to solely use religion to justify
violence and mayhem.
Akintunde E. Akinade
191
192
193
194
Biographies
Akintunde E. Akinade is professor of Theology at Georgetown Universitys School of Foreign Service in Qatar. He is the
author of Christian Responses to Islam in Nigeria: A Contextual Study of Ambivalent Encounters (2014).
195
Barry Cooper FRSC, a fourth generation Albertan, was educated at Shawnigan Lake School, the University of British
Columbia and Duke University (PhD, 1969). He taught at
several eastern universities before coming to the University of Calgary in 1981. He has published 180 articles and
over 30 books, most recently Consciousness and Politics:
From Analysis to Meditation in the late work of Eric Voegelin, (St Augustines Press, 2016); in 2004, the University
of Missouri Press published New Political Religions: An Analysis of Modern
Terrorism. He publishes a weekly column in the Calgary Herald and other
CanWest Global papers.
Eric Geoffroy is an Expert in Islam and Professor in Islamic Studies in the Department of Arabic and Islamic studies
at the University of Strasbourg (France). He also teaches at
another institutions such as the Open University of Catalonia (Barcelona). Specialist in the study of Sufism in Islam, he
works as well on intercultural and interreligious relations
and spirituality challenges in the contemporary world (spirituality and globalization; spirituality and ecology). He published more than ten books and directed collective works as well. He is the
author of numerous articles in magazines specialized in Islamology and has
written more than twenty articles in the Encyclopedia of Islam 2nd and 3rd
196
ed. (Brill, Leiden). Some of his publications have been translated into different languages.
Daisaku Ikeda (1928- ) is a Buddhist philosopher, peacebuilder, poet and author. He is president of the Soka Gakkai
International (SGI), a socially engaged network of Buddhist
lay believers with members in 192 countries and territories
around the world; he is also the founder of a number of educational and research institutions, including the Toda Institute for Global Peace and Policy Research, and Soka University. Since 1983, Ikeda has issued peace proposals addressing
critical global issues and in support of the work of the United Nations.
197
Ali Lakhani graduated from Cambridge University with a B.A. (Hons), LL.B., and LL.M. He is
based in Vancouver and has practised as a barrister and solicitor at all levels of the courts in
Canada for nearly 40 years. In 2015 he was appointed Queens Counsel. In 1998 he founded
Sacred Web: A Journal of Tradition and Modernity,
which he continues to edit. He is the editor of the
anthology, The Sacred Foundations of Justice in Islam (2006), which contains
his prize-winning essay on 'Ali ibn Abi Talib, 'The Metaphysics of Human
Governance: Imam 'Ali, Truth and Justice', and is the author of an anthology
of essays, The Timeless Relevance of Traditional Wisdom (2010). An Ismaili
Muslim, he has recently written a book (forthcoming) on Ismaili faith and
ethics, focusing on the teachings of His Highness the Aga Khan.
Oliver Leaman teaches philosophy at the University of Kentucky and has previously taught
in the Middle East and Britain. He is the author
most recently of The Quran: Philosophical Perspectives, Bloomsbury, 2016 and Controversies
in Contemporary Islam, Routlege 2013 and is on
the editorial board of the Islamic Studies section of Oxford Bibliographies
Online.
Louis Massignon (1883-1962) was a Catholic scholar of Islam
and a pioneer of Catholic- Muslim mutual understanding. He
was an influential figure in the twentieth century with regard
to the Catholic church's relationship with Islam.
198
John Paraskevopoulos is a Shin Buddhist priest from Australia. He attended the University of Melbourne where he
was awarded first-class honours in Philosophy. Reverend
Paraskevopoulos received ordination in 1994 at the Temple of the Primal Vow (Hongan-ji) in Kyoto and has written
a number of works including Call of the Infinite (also pub-
lished in French, Italian and Greek editions), The Fragrance of Light and
The Unhindered Path (scheduled to appear in late 2016). He is currently
engaged in a range of pastoral and scholarly endeavours.
Sofia Stril-Rever: PhD in Indian studies, a writer, biographer and interpreter of the Dalai Lama with whom she
has co-authored 3 books: New Reality (Les Arnes, 2016),
My Spiritual Journey (Harper One, 2010), translated from
French into about twenty languages, and My Appeal to the
World (Hay House International, 2015). As an interpreter
of sacred mantras, she has also released the CD Dakinis
(SometimeStudio, Paris, 2012)
Sofia Stril-Rever is the cofounder and spokeperson of P.U.R.E., the Association for Peace and Universal Responsibility, based in Paris, France, www.
buddhaline.net
199
200
201