23rd Jan2012

My Fellow American Gets Selected by the Media That Matters Film Festival

by admin

We are very excited to announce that UPF’s film My Fellow American has been selected by the Media That Matters Film Festival for its 2012 short film collection!

The Media That Matters Film Festival is the premiere showcase for short films on the most important topics of the day. Local and global, online and in communities around the world, Media That Matters engages diverse audiences and inspires them to take action. Every June, Media That Matters presents a new collection of twelve shorts. The festival launches in New York City with a World Premiere at the IFC Center and an Awards Ceremony at HBO where every filmmaker is honored and many receive cash awards sponsored by major foundations and corporations. Previous presenters include Tim Robbins, Al Franken, David Cross, Woody Harrelson, Barbara Kopple and Peter Yarrow.  The festival launch also includes the Media as a Tool for Social Change Workshop, a unique convening of filmmakers, educators, activists, nonprofits and youth.

As part of this year’s short film collection, My Fellow American is being screened at AHRC New York and at Providence Inner City Arts this month, at The Bushwick School for Social Justice and in New York City Parks in February, and at the American University in Bulgaria this coming spring! More screenings are being scheduled at several school in NY, LA, and CA of MTM 11. We will share more information about the various screening events as they come.

 

To learn more about the Media That Matters Film festival, visit: http://www.mediathatmattersfest.org/

To learn how you can contribute to the My Fellow American project, visit: http://www.myfellowamerican.us/support

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

02nd Nov2011

Announcing the Greater Washington Muslim–Jewish Young Leadership Twinning Event

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20,000 Dialogues has partnered with The Foundation for Ethnic Understanding for a Muslim-Jewish Leadership Twinning event on November 20th at the DC Jewish Community Center.

Please join us for a film and discussion with a coalition of Washington area Jewish and Muslim young leaders and professionals. All young Jews and Muslims are welcome.

This short film shows Jewish and Muslim heroes discussing how their respective faiths enrich their lives and impel them to fulfill a core commitment in both religions, to repair the world and help people in need. This will be followed by a moderated discussion among participants about how their own connections to Judaism and Islam impact what they do in the world.


The Washington Jewish-Muslim Young Leadership event is part of the Weekend of Twinning, November 18-20; an annual event created by the Foundation for Ethnic Understanding during which tens of thousands of Muslims and Jews across North America, Europe and around the world come together in scores of locales to build ties of friendship and trust.

 

When: Sunday, November 20 · 1:00pm – 3:00pm
Where: The Washington DC Jewish Community Center
1529 16th Street NW, Washington DC 20036
Washington, DC

 

RSVP for the event on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=227295657333759

Learn more about The Foundation for Ethnic Understanding: www.ffeu.org

09th Sep2011

Muslim, Jewish and Christian Leaders Join Together to Confront Extremism on 9/11

by admin

Washington, DC – On the tenth anniversary of September 11th, Muslim, Jewish and Christian clergy embark on an 18-city tour of the United States to combat religious intolerance that has risen after 9/11.

They will be presenting messages about religious diversity and pluralism to thousands – from fellow clergy and legislators to ordinary citizens – engaging in interfaith dialogue and sharing their views of the most important lessons from 9/11.

“Following September 11, moderate voices of all people of faith far outnumbered the few who twist religion for their own purposes,” said Imam Yahya Hendi, the President of Clergy Beyond Borders.  “We take pride in America’s tradition of pluralism and diversity – the United States is truly a country of all, for all.”

The tour will kick off on September 11, and will feature prayer breakfasts with faith leaders, solidarity meetings with religious communities facing persecution, workshops in reconciliation co-hosted by churches, synagogues, and Islamic centers, as well as dialogues in divinity schools, universities, and high schools.

“As Jews, Christians, and Muslims, we believe that our freedom of religion is threatened when any faith is singled out for attack,”  said Rabbi Gerald Serotta, Executive Director of Clergy Beyond Borders.   “To fight extremism, we need more religious tolerance, not less.”

Practicing what they preach, the Imams, Reverends and Rabbis will join one another’s religious services.  They will engage in Bible Study in a Chattanooga Church, present the Friday Khutbah (sermon) in an Atlanta mosque, and participate in Sabbath services in a Cleveland synagogue.

“On this trip, we are helping people move from fear to understanding – and for that we turn to the common values that we find in all our religions,” said Father Adam Bunnell, a Franciscan Friar and Roman Catholic priest and who serves on the Board of Clergy Beyond Borders.

The tour is being led by Founder and President of Clergy Beyond Borders, Imam Yahya Hendi, who is also the Muslim chaplain at Georgetown University and a member of the Islamic Jurisprudence Council of North America; Rabbi Gerald Serotta, Executive Director of Clergy Beyond Borders and founding Chair of Rabbis for Human Rights-North America; Rev. Dr. Adam Bunnell, a Franciscan Friar and Roman Catholic priest who currently serves as Special Assistant for International and Interfaith Relations to the President of Bellarmine University; and Rev. Steve Martin, Executive Director of the New Evangelical Partnership for the Common Good.  Other religious leaders will be joining the group at each stop on their 15-day journey.

WHO
: Clergy Beyond Borders

WHAT
: Religious Leaders’ Caravan for Reconciliation: An American Journey of Clergy Beyond Borders

WHEN: 
Sunday, September 11, 2011 – Sunday, September 25, 2011

WHERE
: Harrisburg, PA – Sept. 11
Washington DC – Sept. 12
Richmond, VA – Sept. 12
Durham, NC – Sept. 12, 13
Charlotte, NC – Sept. 13
Greenville, SC – Sept. 14
Atlanta, GA – Sept. 15-17
Chattanooga, TN – Sept. 18
Nashville, TN – Sept. 19
Murfreesboro, TN – Sept. 19
Louisville, KY – Sept. 20, 21
Cincinnati, OH – Sept. 21
Detroit, MI – Sept. 22
Toledo, OH – Sept. 23, 24
Cleveland, OH – Sept. 23
Mercersburg, PA – Sept. 25
Frederick, MD – Sept. 25

Clergy Beyond Borders (CBB) is a nonprofit organization dedicated to an active religious pluralism that goes beyond mere tolerance for difference. The basic premise of their work is the conviction that all religions contain a message of commitment to improving the world, and that too often the differences rather than the commonalities become the subject for discussion. CBB promotes mutual recognition among religious communities, seeking not to remove meaningful borders between them, but rather building bridges of understanding and cooperation.

For specific travel times and locations or to make arrangements for interviews, please contact Richard Eisendorf (reisendorf@imdpconsulting.com or 202-569-1714) or Katherine Mullen (katherine.mullen@yahoo.com or 914-309-7804).

For more information, visit www.ClergyBeyondBorders.org  or follow them on Facebook <http://www.facebook.com/pages/Frederick-MD/Clergy-Beyond-Borders/330544659646?v=wall&ref=ts>  and Twitter <http://twitter.com/1ark1humanity> .

08th Sep2011

“Intolerance Ends with Me” – A URI Online Pledge Campaign

by admin

On September 1, United Religions Initiative launched “Intolerance Ends with Me,” an online pledge campaign to mobilize individuals around the world to put a stop to intolerance in their communities. The campaign is inspired by the 10th anniversary of 9/11, and the 30th anniversary of the International Day of Peace, September 21st. Pledge takers promise to take one action each day in the month of September to promote tolerance and respect for diversity in their communities, to speak out against discrimination. 20,000 Dialogues has agreed to partner with URI, a global grassroots interfaith organization, to promote the campaign. We invite you to take the Pledge (link to pledge: http://www.uri.org/takethepledge) and join us in the global movement for peace!

Visit www.uri.org for more information about URI, and to take advantage of other great interfaith resources, including a toolkit for interfaith solidarity on the anniversary of 9-11.

 

06th Sep2011

Generation 9/11

by admin
With the 10th anniversary of 9/11 approaching, we are excited to spread the word about  the video project Generation 9/11, a joint endeavor of the British Council’s Our Shared Future (oursharedfuture.org) and Transatlantic Network 2020 (tn2020.org) projects.

Though the attacks of September 11 were most keenly felt in the U.S., their impact resounded worldwide. For many who came of age around 2001, the events of that day shaped their worldview, sometimes in surprising ways. Ten years later, they asked young adults from across the globe how their perspective of international and cross-cultural relations has changed.

The videos in this album reflect the personal views of the participants, and the British Council bears no responsibility for their content or the views expressed by participants in the Generation 9/11 video project.

Video editing by Gabriella Kessler, a Transatlantic Network 2020 member.

To watch the videos, visit: http://vimeo.com/album/1680725
31st Aug2011

Announcing Groundswell

by admin

20,000 Dialogues is happy to share the announcement by our fellow peacemaker Valarie Kaur about the launch of a new grassroots initiative called GROUNDSWELL:

 

Big news to share!  As you know, for the last decade, I’ve had the opportunity to tour with Divided We Fall, leading dialogues on campuses and communities in 200 cities across the country.  And I began to notice something — a rising generation of people like me were tired of partisan politics and hungry for meaningful social action.  Many of us found it in the campaign of President Obama.  And while I’m proud to have worked on his campaign, it’s clear now that we need more than a president to heal and repair our country. We need a movement — organized not around a political party or a single issue, but a shared moral vision for a better world.

Last fall, a band of students came together in the Common Ground Campaign to imagine what our generation’s movement might look and feel like.  We noticed that we come from different backgrounds — Sikh, Catholic, Muslim, Atheist, Jewish — but we share the same deep moral commitments.  And we aren’t alone.  Most of us share a sense of moral calling that has nothing to do with political agendas.  But religious fundamentalists still hold the monopoly over “morality” on the airwaves and in the halls of power.  What would happen if we could channel those moral commitments into visible collective action?  Could we form the beginnings of a multifaith movement for justice?  Auburn Seminary, a 200-year old multifaith leadership institute, generously offered a home to work on this vision.  And so this year, while finishing up at Yale Law School, I joined Auburn’s staff to develop a new movement-building initiative.

Today, I’m proud to announce the launch of GROUNDSWELL — a multifaith network that connects, mobilizes, and amplifies the moral center around urgent social causes.  In our first campaign, we are generating a groundswell of community this ten-year anniversary of 9/11. We are chronicling, connecting, and resourcing events in all 50 states that bring people together in hope and healing.  We’re inviting people to see themselves as part of one movement that will eclipse anti-Muslim rhetoric and stand for open communities. And we’re collecting Ribbons of Hope from across the country and around the world, which we will weave into a diverse tapestry to represent the groundswell during 9/11/11 ceremonies. (Just click here to send your ribbon to NYC for free). 

Finally, we’re organizing a special event in New York City next Tuesday, Sept 6th.  It’s a teach-in entitled “Out of the Shadows of 9/11: Millennials, Movement-Building, and the Global Groundswell” where I will share the stage with thought leaders to reflect on the last decade and envision the possibilities for a multifaith movement in the coming era. (Live streaming here). 

I’d love to send you separate updates about each of these efforts and events — and invite you to take part this September and beyond.  Since you are all friends, family, classmates, colleagues, and fans of Divided We Fall, I will plan to add you to the Groundswell email list this week, which just means you get more frequent emails from me.  If you would rather stick to the occasional update, please let me know.

I don’t know where this journey will go.  But I’m excited to travel it alongside all of you.  Would love to hear what you’re working on as we prepare for future Groundswell campaigns (and just in general, too)!

 

To learn more about the initiative, visit: http://www.groundswell-movement.org/

26th Aug2011

“The Light In Her Eyes” – An Upcoming Documentary from Julia Meltzer and Laura Nix

by admin

20,000 Dialogues is pleased to present the upcoming documentary film The Light In Her Eyes, directed by Julia Meltzer and Laura Nix:

Houda al-Habash, a conservative Muslim preacher, founded a Qur’an school for girls in Damascus, Syria when she was just 17 years old. Every summer, her female students immerse themselves in a rigorous study of Islam, in addition to their secular schooling. A surprising cultural shift is underway—women are claiming space within the mosque, a place historically dominated by men.

Challenging tradition, Houda insists education for women is a form of worship. Using Qur’anic teachings, she encourages her students to pursue higher education, jobs, and public lives, while remaining committed to an interpretation of Islam prioritizing women’s role as wives and mothers. In a world rarely seen, The Light In Her Eyes tells the story of a leader who challenges the women of her community to live according to Islam, without giving up their dreams. Shot right before the uprising in Syria erupted, the film is an exclusive look at a social movement thriving in a country controlled by a repressive regime.

To learn more about the film, visit:  http://thelightinhereyesmovie.com/

“Like” it on Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/thelightinhereyes

24th Aug2011

American Muslims Most Tolerant in United States – by Muqtedar Khan

by admin

The following is an article by Muqtedar Khan, published on the Huffington Post on August 23, 2011.

Newark, Delaware – A superficial study of the media coverage in the past two years conveys a misleading picture about the state of American Muslims and their relationship with the rest of the nation. The terrible attack on Fort Hood by Major Nidal Malik Hasan, the attempted June 2010 bombing of Times Square, the shrill rhetoric and legislative activism of the anti-sharia brigade, and the incessant targeting of Islam and Muslims by conservative politicians, media personalities and political entrepreneurs all combine to suggest that life for Muslims in America must be tough.

But on the contrary, large sample surveys and in-depth studies conducted recently provide a more complex and optimistic picture about Muslim American reality, especially when it comes to three of the most talked-about issues: radicalization, American Muslims’ perceptions of the United States and religious tolerance.

A US Department of Justice study about Muslim American radicalization, conducted in 2010 by researchers from two North Carolina universities, argued that terrorism actually committed by American Muslims was surprisingly low. They attributed this low number to the anti-radicalization efforts of various Muslim communities and mosques in the United States. This in-depth study not only reassures law enforcement agencies that the fear of Muslim radicalism in America is overblown, but it also underscores the reality that US mosques are allies in the struggle against extremism — not a source of extremism as some right-wing pundits and politicians insist.

When it comes to how American Muslims perceive America, there is more that is surprising. Another study, “Muslim Americans: Faith Freedom and the Future,” a large sample survey conducted over a period of two years by Gallup, reveals that American Muslims — more than members of any other community — claim that they are “thriving in America.” This is a remarkable condition for a community which is under so much scrutiny from the media, law enforcement and the US Congress itself.

Neither bad economy nor odious politics seem to faze American Muslims’ faith in America. Eight out of ten American Muslims approve of US President Barack Obama, whose overall approval ratings are at the lowest point since he assumed the presidency, and American Muslims have the most confidence in the honesty of the American political system, more than any other religious community.

But perhaps the findings on religious tolerance offer the most reason for optimism. The Gallup report found that American Muslims are, along with Mormons, the most religiously tolerant of groups. Only eight percent of American Muslims feel estranged from other faiths, while 92 percent of them are “tolerant” or “tolerant and accepting” of other faiths!

I suspect that this high regard for pluralism is actually a reflection of holding a high regard for religion itself. Muslims who attach a great deal of significance to their faith naturally have an affinity towards those who share their reverence for God.

I hope that those Americans who are being misled by the so-called anti-sharia initiatives in the United States read this report. It casts serious doubts on the assertions that Muslims — members of America’s most tolerant religious community — aspire to impose their faith on others.

Finally, there is an interesting sub-story in this report, especially for those Muslims who believe that all Jews are “out to get” Islam and Muslims. According to the Gallup poll, American Jews more than any other group recognize the prevailing Islamophobia and prejudice against Muslims in America. In fact, 80 per cent of American Jews, next only to American Muslims (93 per cent), believe that American Muslims are loyal to America. Of all religious communities, Jewish Americans are least likely to believe that American Muslims might be Al Qaeda sympathizers. Both Muslims and Jews in America also have very similar views about the Arab-Israeli conflict: 78 per cent of Jews and 81 percent of Muslims support the vision of a Palestinian state coexisting alongside Israel.

I hope these findings give further impetus to the Muslim-Jewish dialogue and relations in the United States.

As we reflect on the tragedy of 9/11 and its aftermath, I hope we allow facts and reality to shape our thinking and reject the dark incitements that led to the tragedy in Norway.

 

Dr. Muqtedar Khan is Associate Professor at the University of Delaware and a Fellow of the Institute for Social Policy and Understanding. He is the author of American Muslims: Bridging Faith and Freedom and his website is www.ijtihad.org. This article was written for the Common Ground News Service (CGNews).

 

The article can be found here: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/muqtedar-khan/american-muslims-tolerant_b_934515.html

02nd Aug2011

What Would Nietzsche Say About Europe’s Islam Crisis?

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by Daniel Tutt

Europe is undergoing an identity crisis and Islam has been put at the center of it. The recent terrorist attacks in Norway by a deranged man who harbored anti-Muslim sentiments and sympathized with far right wing anti-immigrant political ideologies has brought this crisis once again to the surface.

The crisis of Islam in Europe revolves, in part, around Europe’s own confrontation with its cultural tradition and the debates raging about multiculturalism. What might Nietzsche, the 19th century philosopher, who famously coined “God is dead,” have to tell us about Europe’s ongoing problems with Islam and multiculturalism?

Ibrahim Kalin, a scholar of Islam at Georgetown University, argues in a recent essay (“Islamophobia and the Limits of Multiculturalism“) that debates about Islam in Europe tend to boil over into debates about multiculturalism. This phenomenon leads Kalin to argue that Islam and the role of Muslims in Europe short circuits the discourse on multiculturalism, and tends to lead toward a type of European identity crisis.

In many ways, Nietzsche was the first major thinker to confront the loss of a religious worldview in Europe. Yet, he was always an admirer of religion, which he referred to as “the highest form of art.” The best kind of religion for Nietzsche is concerned, not with the nature of reality, but with the ultimate existential meaning of life.

At the core of the multicultural debate in Europe are questions of values and tradition, a topic Nietzsche took head on in his famous work, “On the Genealogy of Morals.” Nietzsche held a much different definition of culture than the one that shapes our debates about multiculturalism today. He saw Kultur as emblematic of an entire civilization, and his work sought to establish a genealogical reevaluation of the decadent values that brought Europe to a stage of existence that he deemed weak and degraded.

Nietzsche believed that cultural identity is intimately tied up with cultures outside of Europe, and especially with Islamic culture. Scholars of Nietzsche, Roy Jackson and Ian Almond, have recently written about Nietzsche’s unique views on Islam in seeking to better understand how the prolific thinker might instruct us today as we face debates about multiculturalism and the rise of political Islam. Although Nietzsche never references the Quran or hadith (sayings of prophet Muhammad) and never travelled to a Muslim country, he did read voraciously from the European Orientalist authors of his time.

Nietzsche believed that close personal contact with Muslims was the best way understand and appreciate Europe’s own tradition and unravel its crisis of values. In a letter to a friend, Nietzsche wrote that he desired not only to get to know Islam, but to get to know the most conservative type of Islam so as to see his own European soul under the mirror, where he might grasp the decadence of Europe’s declining values. He wrote, “I want to live for a while amongst Muslims, in the places moreover where their faith is at its most devout; this way my eye and judgment for all things European will be sharpened.”

Nietzsche never did live among Muslims. Yet, if he hadn’t gone “mad” at a relatively young age, scholars suggest that he would have eventually written a more focused work on Islam. It must be understood that Nietzsche’s understanding of Islam was informed in the context of a late 19th century discourse of European Orientalism. Certain clichés are apparent in his writing about Islam. His obsession with the will to power colored his reading of Islam and made him praise Islam for what he called its “manliness,” its un-democratic spirit, ordered discipline and what he referred to as a “life affirming will.”

Nietzsche And Multiculturalism Today

It is likely that Nietzsche would be a strong critic of certain forms of multiculturalism, especially those that promote cultural relativism and political correctness. At the same time, in “Beyond Good and Evil,” Nietzsche was a strong advocate against those in Germany that were anti-Semitic, a position familiar to European Muslims today.

Political leaders in Europe today such as German Prime Minister Angela Merkel have referred to multiculturalism as a failed project due to rising immigrant crime and poverty and an overall loss of connection to an original European cultural identity.

What would Nietzsche say in response to Europe’s crisis with Islam and multiculturalism? Nietzsche found liberation in destroying all foundations of cultural values and radically questioning the foundations of tradition. But would Nietzsche prefer that Islam assimilate into Europe, or that it integrate and retain its own autonomous culture distinct from Europe? Based on his desire to maintain a clear distinction between Islam and Europe in his own time, it is clear that Nietzsche would prefer that Muslims retain their own culture and not passively assimilate into a secular Europe.

His vigorous support for contact and interaction with Muslims provides a key to Europeans seeking to understand Islam, but even more importantly, his message can help Europeans better understand their own identity crisis.

26th Jul2011

Oslo Attack Highlights the Dangers of Islamophobia – by Joshua Stanton

by admin

The following is an article by Joshua Stanton published on the Huffington Post on July 24, 2011. In response to the tragedy in Norway over the past weekend, his article is an important message about the power and influence of words and the dangers of anti-Muslim sentiments.

“The mass-murder in Oslo last Friday was tragic. At least 90 innocents — many of them youth — are already dead, and authorities fear that the death toll may continue rising.

Evidence is mounting that a right-wing extremist, Anders Behring Breivik, carried out the attack at least in part to spark a “civil war“against Muslim migrants to Europe and the left-wing governments that, in his view, willfully enable their immigration. In his mind, the attack was a defense against immigrants who hold different values — and the start of a much bigger fight for Christianity against Islam.

In a 1,500-page manifesto, Breivik reportedly claimed, “The time for dialogue is over. We gave peace a chance. The time for armed resistance has come.” The New York Times also reported that

Mr. Breivik was also believed to have posted a video on Friday, calling for Christian conservatives in Europe to rise up violently as a modern-day version of the Crusades-era Knights Templar to save Europe from Islamic totalitarianism. In its closing moments, the video depicts Mr. Breivik in military uniform, holding assault weapons.

If ever a dark, twisted irony existed, this may be one: Breivik claims to be saving Europe from Muslims (whom he denotes as violent and autocratic) by violently attacking an event convened by a democratically elected government. He struck at Norway’s government in the name of protecting the country it serves. Islamophobia, it would seem, blinded Breivik to the horrors and contradictions of his own deeds.

While I pray that those in mourning from the loss of loved ones are granted peace and that the entire country of Norway is blessed with solace in its grief, I believe that there is much Americans can and must learn from Breivik’s attack, as well.

The first is that Islamophobia is not merely confined to a war of words against Muslims. Islamophobic words, of which Breivik shared many in his 1,500-page document, often spiral into deeds.

We have already observed this within the United States, though thankfully in largely non-violent ways. (Hate crimes against Muslims stand as an egregious exception to this rule.) As we saw in protests against a Muslim community organization in California this March and attempts to block the creation of New York’s Park51 community center last summer, among others, Muslim communities have been repeatedly impeded from engaging in their ordinary communal functions. Protests against Muslim communal organizations and gathering places have become the physical manifestations of Islamophobic disdain and even hatred.

The second is that an Islamophobia of words and limited actions has the potential to turn violent. The Manichean notion that Christians (or Jews or Hindus or Atheists) are good while Muslims are intrinsically bad is volatile and can spiral from misapprehension to misinformation to misdeed to truly terrifying acts of violence. Words count and must not be ignored. Islamophobia, we now know from Oslo, can itself be a starting point for unthinkable brutality.

When we read of American Islamophobes, we must no longer deny the potential they have to undermine the societal values that we hold dear. Religious freedom is jeopardized when Muslims are singled out. But Islamophobes may come to threaten more than religious freedom — perhaps even our very security.

My prayers right now are with the people of Norway. Yet my thoughts are with my own country and the potential for the Islamophobia we are coming to know too well in words to manifest itself in senseless acts of violence like those we saw last week in Oslo.”

The article can be found here: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/joshua-stanton/oslo-bomber-highlights-th_b_907890.html

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