Time to Talk
June 24, 2008
Community | Social Action | The Future
(1 comments)
By Rabbi Eric H. Yoffie (First posted as an op-ed on Israel News)
The time has come to engage in dialogue with our Muslim neighbors and to educate ourselves about Islam.
Dialogue is especially critical now. We live in a world in which religion is manipulated to justify the most horrific acts and where Islamic extremists constitute a profound threat. When fanatics kill in the name of God, sensible religious people have an obligation to do something about it.
What is our task? To find the voices of moderation and to reclaim from the fanatics the true essence of religious belief. To do this, we must know what Islam truly stands for and engage in dialogue with our Muslim neighbors.
To this end, the Union has begun working together with the
Islamic Society of North America ( ISNA), an umbrella body of more than
300 mosques that brings 30,000 people together at its annual
convention. We chose ISNA as our partner in dialogue because the
society has issued a strong, unequivocal condemnation of terror,
including a specific denunciation of Hezbollah and Hamas violence
against Jews and Israelis. ISNA has also recognized Israel as a Jewish
state and supports a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict. Last September I was the first major Jewish leader ever to
address the ISNA convention, and three months later ISNA President Dr.
Ingrid Mattson addressed our Biennial convention.
Today ISNA and the Union for Reform Judaism have prepared an
adult education curriculum on Islam. I urge every synagogue to consider
offering a course on Islam as part of its adult education program.
In search of fruitful dialogue, the Union and ISNA have also created a five-session dialogue program (manual
and video) to be used by Reform synagogues and ISNA mosques. Nowhere in
this dialogue will we feed each other pabulum. Instead, we will assert
our convictions with passion, even as we remain respectful of our
disagreements, and we will not avoid the subject of Israel.
We enter into this dialogue with our eyes wide open. We know
that ISNA--a large, unwieldy coalition--contains some anti-Zionist
elements that cause us discomfort. We also know that while we have had
extraordinary success with dialogue in Great Neck, St. Louis, and
Omaha, so too we have had our share of failures. Nevertheless, we must
not desist from this task. America is one of the very few places in the
world where the promise of true pluralism is not too wild a hope. And
in this great country, we are stronger and safer when we transcend our
fears and work together.
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Good luck.