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Join interfaith commentator Eboo Patel as he explores what it means
to be "literate" about other faiths, how interfaith cooperation
"works" and why, the skills needed for interfaith cooperation and
the significant role that our institutions, including colleges and
faith communities, can play in this process. This resources
contains all he material needed by class participants and the group
facilitator. SOLD SEPARATELY. Embracing Interfaith Cooperation DVD.
This resource features five 10-15 minute presentations by Eboo
Patel, each of which is followed by video of Patel interacting with
a small, diverse group of adults and young adults as they respond
and discuss interfaith issues. Eboo Patel believes religion is a
bridge of cooperation rather than a barrier of division. Inspired
by his faith as a Muslim, his Indian heritage and his American
citizen ship, he speaks to his vision of interfaith harmony at
places like he Clinton Global Initiative, The Nobel Peace Prize
Forum, as well as college and universality campuses across the
country. He is a regular contributor to the Washington Post, USA
Todayand he Huffington Post."
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God Beyond Borders (Hardcover)
Sheryl A Kujawa-Holbrook, Jack L. Seymour; Preface by Eboo Patel
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R1,169
R959
Discovery Miles 9 590
Save R210 (18%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Understanding our religious neighbors is more important than
ever-but also more challenging. In a world of deep religious strife
and increasing pluralism it can seem safer to remain inside the
"bubble" of our faith community. Christian college campuses in
particular provide a strong social bubble that reinforces one's
faith identity in distinction from the wider society. Many
Christians worry that engaging in interfaith dialogue will require
watering down their faith and accepting other religions as equally
true. Bethel University professors Marion Larson and Sara Shady not
only make the case that we can love our religious neighbors without
diluting our commitment, but also offer practical wisdom and ideas
for turning our faith bubbles into bridges of religious inclusion
and interfaith engagement. Drawing on the parables of Jesus,
research on interreligious dialogue, and their own classroom
experience, Larson and Shady provide readers with the tools they
need to move beyond the bubble. Interfaith dialogue is difficult,
and From Bubble to Bridge is the timely guide we have been waiting
for.
Colleges and universities silo diversity and inclusion by creating
specific courses to address them, or programs to welcome and
support people with a range of identities, whereas in reality
students, faculty and staff do not encounter diversity in the
fractured ways that match the organizational structures of our
institutions. We all simultaneously embody a variety of identities
with different saliency in different circumstances and times. This
book offers models for institutions to move intentionally toward
intersections - of study abroad and multiculturalism, of race and
gender and religion, and of other essential aspects of our
educational programs and our students' identities - to open doors
to new possibilities that better prepare our students for life in a
diverse world, and that allow our institutions to become more
efficient and effective as we strive to not simply do things better
in our own separate spheres, but to do better things by working
together across difference. Each chapter offers action-oriented
analysis focusing on particular campus intersections, rather than
attending to specific demographic groups. Chapter authors also
build on their own local expertise of doing this work on campuses
that often do not have deep pockets or rich histories of such
efforts. The book is organized into three sections: People focuses
on diversity broadly defined, considering questions about how we
recruit and engage the students, faculty, and staff in the campus
community, and how we work with governing boards and others to
promote inclusive excellence. Environment focuses on inclusion,
including residence life, the local community, the working and
learning environment, and external factors and events such as
national and international news events or town gown relationships.
Learning focuses on perspective taking and learning about
difference in the core curriculum, the disciplines, and the
co-curriculum, as well as professional development for faculty and
staff. This ground breaking book aims to help readers, no matter
what position they occupy on campus, to develop the knowledge and
capacities necessary to do this essential work and is premised on
the understanding that identity, oppression, power and
marginalization cannot be accomplished by looking solely at single
identities.
An inspiring collection of readings that will raise deep questions
about service and its roots in faith. "There is a deep yearning
among the vast majority of people of all religious and
philosophical traditions to make real their most enduring shared
principles—to care for creation, to serve others with compassion,
and to protect and enhance the gift of life…. We believe that
reflecting on these principles strengthens our capacity to embody
them." —from the Introduction Explore the connections between
faith, service, and social justice through the prose, verse, and
sacred texts of the world's great faith traditions—Christianity,
Judaism, Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism, Taoism and more. Drawing from
diverse literary genres, religious and philosophical perspectives
and historical periods, these short and provocative readings cut to
the heart of the many obstacles and joys that accompany lives
devoted to faith and service: Why do I serve? • Whom do I serve?
• How do I serve? This rich collection will create a platform for
discussing and understanding the faith-based service of others as
well as inspire you to reflect on the meaning behind your own
commitment to improving the world. Contributors: Umar Faruq
Abd-Allah • Jane Addams • Sholom Aleichem • Bidpai • Cesar
Chavez • Chuang-Tzu • Dorothy Day • Chitra Banerjee
Divakaruni • Mahatma Gandhi • Linda Gregg • Hafiz •
Hamzayusuf • Thich Nhat Hanh • Mark Helprin • Abraham Joshua
Heschel • Gerard Manley Hopkins • Kabir • Martin Luther King
Jr. • The Dalai Lama • Anne Lamott • Lao-Tzu • Abraham
Lincoln • Maimonides • Valerie Martin • Gabriela Mistral •
Mikhail Naimy • Friedrich Nietzsche • Tim O'Brien • Flannery
O’Connor • Mary Oliver • George Orwell • John Oskison •
Eboo Patel • Peggy Payne • I. L. Peretz • Rumi • Ryokan •
Tayeb Salih • Harold M. Schulweis • Leslie Marmon Silko •
Anna Swir • Rabindranath Tagore • William Trevor • Shih Te
• Swami Vivekananda • Walt Whitman
Violence committed by religious young people has become a regular
feature of our daily news reports. What we hear less about are the
growing numbers of religious young people from all faith
backgrounds who are committed to interfaith understanding and
cooperation. Building the Interfaith Youth Movement is the first
book to describe this important phenomenon. Contributions include
concrete descriptions of various interfaith youth projects across
the country_from an arts-program in the South Bronx to a research
program at Harvard University to a national organization called the
Interfaith Youth Core based in Chicago_written by the founders and
leaders of those initiatives. Additional chapters articulate the
theory and methodology of this important new movement. This book is
a must-read for college chaplains, religious leaders who work with
youth, and students and scholars of contemporary religion.
Violence committed by religious young people has become a regular
feature of our daily news reports. What we hear less about are the
growing numbers of religious young people from all faith
backgrounds who are committed to interfaith understanding and
cooperation. Building the Interfaith Youth Movement is the first
book to describe this important phenomenon. Contributions include
concrete descriptions of various interfaith youth projects across
the country-from an arts-program in the South Bronx to a research
program at Harvard University to a national organization called the
Interfaith Youth Core based in Chicago-written by the founders and
leaders of those initiatives. Additional chapters articulate the
theory and methodology of this important new movement. This book is
a must-read for college chaplains, religious leaders who work with
youth, and students and scholars of contemporary religion.
"Strong debut . . . this nuanced portrait of the state of American
Judaism proffers a cogent vision of how to revitalize the faith."
--Publisher's Weekly Why are religious organizations on the
decline? What changes have caused many of them to lose touch with
modern spiritual needs? What does it take to remain relevant in
today's world? Rabbis Joshua Stanton and Benjamin Spratt take on
these and other critical questions facing religion today. And they
have answers that are frank and yet surprisingly upbeat. Nearly
every facet of American Jewish life--and of American religious life
in general--faces both disruption and great prospects for renewal.
In every corner of our community, Jewish identity, wisdom, ritual,
and power are being remixed and reimagined. As centralized
authority declines, American Judaism moves and grows in a multitude
of directions. As technology reduces the importance of geographic
boundaries, new opportunities for connection and new modes of
exercising power emerge. New mixtures of ancient Jewish practice
and modern needs are beginning to shape the renewal of American
Judaism, widening access to Jewish wisdom and ritual, transforming
Jewish consumers into Jewish co-creators, and building new networks
of Jewish belonging. The initial purposes that inspired much of the
American Jewish infrastructure are now falling victim to their own
success. An emphasis on nostalgia and authenticity encourages us to
mythologize the past and narrow our awareness of the present. A
focus on buildings and centralized power by much of American
Judaism reflects the realities of a century ago. In understanding
what keeps these organizations mired in the past, we can unearth a
new purpose to unify the American Diaspora and guide it toward a
new golden age. The Foreword by Rev. Kaji Dousa, Senior Pastor of
Park Avenue Christian Church, asks what a Black pastor can add to
the work of two white rabbis, and the answer is that "cherished
thinking needs a hard look everywhere. Particularly as we rightly
orient our resources to protecting the good, to eliminating poverty
that need not exist, to eradicating the hatred that threatens the
very existence of our people--we need to look, together. Blacks and
Jews and those living in the intersections therein will only
survive and thrive with the survival and thriving of each other.
So, of course, it makes sense that we will awaken, together." The
Afterword by Dr. Eboo Patel, Founder and President of Interfaith
Youth Core cites the story of Rabbi Akiva, who "did not mourn when
he saw the ruins of the Temple but rather was delighted. 'We always
knew these stones must come down. In order to move forward, this
had to fall apart first. Now we can begin.' All of our religions
have history and theology like this. I think about the emergence of
everything from Catholic orders to Sufi tariqas--renewal movements
that changed the map of entire religions. We are at that same point
again. Rabbis Stanton and Spratt propose we meet the moment with
the generosity and power that are at the heart of all our
religions. Their work gives me confidence that we can."
An inspiring collection of readings that will raise deep questions
about service and its roots in faith. "There is a deep yearning
among the vast majority of people of all religious and
philosophical traditions to make real their most enduring shared
principles—to care for creation, to serve others with compassion,
and to protect and enhance the gift of life…. We believe that
reflecting on these principles strengthens our capacity to embody
them." —from the Introduction Explore the connections between
faith, service, and social justice through the prose, verse, and
sacred texts of the world's great faith traditions—Christianity,
Judaism, Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism, Taoism and more. Drawing from
diverse literary genres, religious and philosophical perspectives
and historical periods, these short and provocative readings cut to
the heart of the many obstacles and joys that accompany lives
devoted to faith and service: Why do I serve? • Whom do I serve?
• How do I serve? This rich collection will create a platform for
discussing and understanding the faith-based service of others as
well as inspire you to reflect on the meaning behind your own
commitment to improving the world. Contributors: Umar Faruq
Abd-Allah • Jane Addams • Sholom Aleichem • Bidpai • Cesar
Chavez • Chuang-Tzu • Dorothy Day • Chitra Banerjee
Divakaruni • Mahatma Gandhi • Linda Gregg • Hafiz •
Hamzayusuf • Thich Nhat Hanh • Mark Helprin • Abraham Joshua
Heschel • Gerard Manley Hopkins • Kabir • Martin Luther King
Jr. • The Dalai Lama • Anne Lamott • Lao-Tzu • Abraham
Lincoln • Maimonides • Valerie Martin • Gabriela Mistral •
Mikhail Naimy • Friedrich Nietzsche • Tim O'Brien • Flannery
O’Connor • Mary Oliver • George Orwell • John Oskison •
Eboo Patel • Peggy Payne • I. L. Peretz • Rumi • Ryokan •
Tayeb Salih • Harold M. Schulweis • Leslie Marmon Silko •
Anna Swir • Rabindranath Tagore • William Trevor • Shih Te
• Swami Vivekananda • Walt Whitman
This book arises out of a recognition that student affairs
professionals have little preparation or guidance in dealing with
matters of spirituality, religion, secularism and interfaith work
at a time of greater diversity in students’ beliefs; and
from a broad recognition that there is a need to engage with this
aspect of student life. For those who don’t know how to
begin and may be nervous about tackling a topic that has the
potential to lead to heated disagreements, this book provides the
resources and practical guidance to undertake this work. With the
aim of providing student affairs practitioners and faculty with the
tools they need to increase their comfort level and enable their
ability to engage in discussions about belief both in and out of
the classroom, the contributors provide foundational knowledge,
concrete teaching ideas, sample activities, and case studies that
can be used in a variety of settings. This book serves multiple
audiences in student affairs by providing teaching ideas for
practitioners who want to include a session or two about interfaith
in their programs as well as ideas for student affairs faculty who
may be teaching one session on this topic or a whole course. The
book is divided into four sections. The first offers context,
provides the findings of research, and asks readers to reflect on
the framework they use to embark on this work, whether a social
justice framework that aims to highlight issues of power and
privilege or an interfaith cooperation framework that aims to
create religious pluralism. Part 2 provides concrete ideas for
creating courses, activities, events, and programs focused on
spirituality, religion, secularity, and interfaith engagement, as
well as ideas for incorporating these topics into courses typically
offered in student affairs preparation programs. Part 3 presents
case studies to engage students, practitioners, and faculty in
thinking about campus situations related to religious diversity.
Part 4 provides some basic information about a variety of religions
and worldviews held by college students.
This book arises out of a recognition that student affairs
professionals have little preparation or guidance in dealing with
matters of spirituality, religion, secularism and interfaith work
at a time of greater diversity in studentsaEURO (TM) beliefs; and
from a broad recognition that there is a need to engage with this
aspect of student life. For those who donaEURO (TM)t know how to
begin and may be nervous about tackling a topic that has the
potential to lead to heated disagreements, this book provides the
resources and practical guidance to undertake this work. With the
aim of providing student affairs practitioners and faculty with the
tools they need to increase their comfort level and enable their
ability to engage in discussions about belief both in and out of
the classroom, the contributors provide foundational knowledge,
concrete teaching ideas, sample activities, and case studies that
can be used in a variety of settings. This book serves multiple
audiences in student affairs by providing teaching ideas for
practitioners who want to include a session or two about interfaith
in their programs as well as ideas for student affairs faculty who
may be teaching one session on this topic or a whole course. The
book is divided into four sections. The first offers context,
provides the findings of research, and asks readers to reflect on
the framework they use to embark on this work, whether a social
justice framework that aims to highlight issues of power and
privilege or an interfaith cooperation framework that aims to
create religious pluralism. Part 2 provides concrete ideas for
creating courses, activities, events, and programs focused on
spirituality, religion, secularity, and interfaith engagement, as
well as ideas for incorporating these topics into courses typically
offered in student affairs preparation programs. Part 3 presents
case studies to engage students, practitioners, and faculty in
thinking about campus situations related to religious diversity.
Part 4 provides some basic information about a variety of religions
and worldviews held by college students.
Colleges and universities silo diversity and inclusion by creating
specific courses to address them, or programs to welcome and
support people with a range of identities, whereas in reality
students, faculty and staff do not encounter diversity in the
fractured ways that match the organizational structures of our
institutions. We all simultaneously embody a variety of identities
with different saliency in different circumstances and times. This
book offers models for institutions to move intentionally toward
intersections - of study abroad and multiculturalism, of race and
gender and religion, and of other essential aspects of our
educational programs and our students' identities - to open doors
to new possibilities that better prepare our students for life in a
diverse world, and that allow our institutions to become more
efficient and effective as we strive to not simply do things better
in our own separate spheres, but to do better things by working
together across difference. Each chapter offers action-oriented
analysis focusing on particular campus intersections, rather than
attending to specific demographic groups. Chapter authors also
build on their own local expertise of doing this work on campuses
that often do not have deep pockets or rich histories of such
efforts. The book is organized into three sections: People focuses
on diversity broadly defined, considering questions about how we
recruit and engage the students, faculty, and staff in the campus
community, and how we work with governing boards and others to
promote inclusive excellence. Environment focuses on inclusion,
including residence life, the local community, the working and
learning environment, and external factors and events such as
national and international news events or town gown relationships.
Learning focuses on perspective taking and learning about
difference in the core curriculum, the disciplines, and the
co-curriculum, as well as professional development for faculty and
staff. This ground breaking book aims to help readers, no matter
what position they occupy on campus, to develop the knowledge and
capacities necessary to do this essential work and is premised on
the understanding that identity, oppression, power and
marginalization cannot be accomplished by looking solely at single
identities.
A timely defense of religious diversity and its centrality to
American identity America is the most religiously devout country in
the Western world and the most religiously diverse nation on the
planet. In today's volatile climate of religious conflict,
prejudice, and distrust, how do we affirm the principle that the
American promise is deeply intertwined with how each of us engages
with people of different faiths and beliefs? Eboo Patel, former
faith adviser to Barack Obama and named one of America's best
leaders by U.S. News & World Report, provides answers to this
timely and consequential question. In this inspiring and
thought-provoking book, Patel draws on his personal experience as a
Muslim in America to examine broader questions about the importance
of religious diversity in the cultural, political, and economic
life of the nation. He explores how religious language has given
the United States some of its most enduring symbols and inspired
many of its most vital civic institutions-and demonstrates how the
genius of the American experiment lies in its empowerment of people
of all creeds, ethnicities, and convictions. Will America's
identity as a Judeo-Christian nation shift as citizens of different
backgrounds grow in numbers and influence? In what ways will
minority religious communities themselves change as they take root
in American soil? In addressing these and other questions, Patel
shows how America's promise is the guarantee of equal rights and
dignity for all, and how that promise is the foundation of
America's unrivaled strength as a nation. The book also includes
incisive commentaries by John Inazu, Robert Jones, and Laurie
Patton on American civil religion, faith and law, and the
increasing number of nonreligious Americans.
A timely defense of religious diversity and its centrality to
American identity America is the most religiously diverse nation on
the planet. In today's volatile climate of religious conflict and
distrust, how do we affirm that the American promise is deeply
intertwined with how each of us engages with people of different
beliefs? Eboo Patel, former faith adviser to Barack Obama, provides
answers to this timely question. In this thought-provoking book,
Patel draws on his personal experience as a Muslim in America to
examine the importance of religious diversity in the nation's
cultural, political, and economic life. He explores how religious
language has given the United States some of its most enduring
symbols and inspired its most vital civic institutions-and
demonstrates how the genius of the American experiment lies in its
empowerment of all people.
"While 9/11 and its aftermath created a traumatic turning point
for most of the writers in this book, it is telling that none of
their essays begin with that moment. These young people were
living, probing, and shifting their Muslim identities long before
9/11. . . . I've heard it said that the second generation never
asks the first about its story, but nearly all the essays in this
book include long, intimate portrayals of Muslim family life, often
going back generations. These young Muslims are constantly
negotiating the differences between families for whom faith and
culture were matters of honor and North America's youth culture,
with its emphasis on questioning, exploring, and inventing one s
own destiny." from the Introduction by Eboo Patel
In Growing Up Muslim, Andrew Garrod and Robert Kilkenny present
fourteen personal essays by college students of the Muslim faith
who are themselves immigrants or are the children of immigrants to
the United States. In their essays, the students grapple with
matters of ethnicity, religious prejudice and misunderstanding, and
what is termed Islamophobia. The fact of 9/11 and subsequent
surveillance and suspicion of Islamic Americans (particularly those
hailing from the Middle East and the Asian Subcontinent) have had a
profound effect on these students, their families, and their
communities of origin."
"While 9/11 and its aftermath created a traumatic turning point
for most of the writers in this book, it is telling that none of
their essays begin with that moment. These young people were
living, probing, and shifting their Muslim identities long before
9/11. . . . I've heard it said that the second generation never
asks the first about its story, but nearly all the essays in this
book include long, intimate portrayals of Muslim family life, often
going back generations. These young Muslims are constantly
negotiating the differences between families for whom faith and
culture were matters of honor and North America's youth culture,
with its emphasis on questioning, exploring, and inventing one s
own destiny." from the Introduction by Eboo Patel
In Growing Up Muslim, Andrew Garrod and Robert Kilkenny present
fourteen personal essays by college students of the Muslim faith
who are themselves immigrants or are the children of immigrants to
the United States. In their essays, the students grapple with
matters of ethnicity, religious prejudice and misunderstanding, and
what is termed Islamophobia. The fact of 9/11 and subsequent
surveillance and suspicion of Islamic Americans (particularly those
hailing from the Middle East and the Asian Subcontinent) have had a
profound effect on these students, their families, and their
communities of origin."
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