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To: Richnorth who wrote (79491)11/27/2001 8:37:36 AM
From: long-gone  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 116752
 
OT
nytimes.com

If 9/11 was indeed the onset of World War III, we have to understand what
this war is about. We're not fighting to eradicate "terrorism." Terrorism
is just a tool. We're fighting to defeat an ideology: religious
totalitarianism. World War II and the cold war were fought to defeat
secular totalitarianism - Nazism and Communism - and World War III is a
battle against religious totalitarianism, a view of the world that my faith
must reign supreme and can be affirmed and held passionately only if all
others are negated. That's bin Ladenism. But unlike Nazism, religious
totalitarianism can't be fought by armies alone. It has to be fought in
schools, mosques, churches and synagogues, and can be defeated only with
the help of imams, rabbis and priests.

The generals we need to fight this war are people like Rabbi David Hartman,
from the Shalom Hartman Institute in Jerusalem. What first attracted me to
Rabbi Hartman when I reported from Jerusalem was his contention that unless
Jews reinterpreted their faith in a way that embraced modernity, without
weakening religious passion, and in a way that affirmed that God speaks
multiple languages and is not exhausted by just one faith, they would have
no future in the land of Israel. And what also impressed me was that he
knew where the battlefield was. He set up his own schools in Israel to
compete with fundamentalist Jews, Muslims and Christians, who used their
schools to preach exclusivist religious visions.

After recently visiting the Islamic madrasa in Pakistan where many Taliban
leaders were educated, and seeing the fundamentalist religious education
the young boys there were being given, I telephoned Rabbi Hartman and
asked: How do we battle religious totalitarianism?

He answered: "All faiths that come out of the biblical tradition - Judaism,
Christianity and Islam - have the tendency to believe that they have the
exclusive truth. When the Taliban wiped out the Buddhist statues, that's
what they were saying. But others have said it too. The opposite of
religious totalitarianism is an ideology of pluralism - an ideology that
embraces religious diversity and the idea that my faith can be nurtured
without claiming exclusive truth. America is the Mecca of that ideology,
and that is what bin Laden hates and that is why America had to be destroyed."

The future of the world may well be decided by how we fight this war. Can
Islam, Christianity and Judaism know that God speaks Arabic on Fridays,
Hebrew on Saturdays and Latin on Sundays, and that he welcomes different
human beings approaching him through their own history, out of their
language and cultural heritage? "Is single-minded fanaticism a necessity
for passion and religious survival, or can we have a multilingual view of
God - a notion that God is not exhausted by just one religious path?" asked
Rabbi Hartman.

Many Jews and Christians have already argued that the answer to that
question is yes, and some have gone back to their sacred texts to
reinterpret their traditions to embrace modernity and pluralism, and to
create space for secularism and alternative faiths. Others - Christian and
Jewish fundamentalists - have rejected this notion, and that is what the
battle is about within their faiths.

What is different about Islam is that while there have been a few attempts
at such a reformation, none have flowered or found the support of a Muslim
state. We patronize Islam, and mislead ourselves, by repeating the mantra
that Islam is a faith with no serious problems accepting the secular West,
modernity and pluralism, and the only problem is a few bin Ladens. Although
there is a deep moral impulse in Islam for justice, charity and compassion,
Islam has not developed a dominant religious philosophy that allows equal
recognition of alternative faith communities. Bin Laden reflects the most
extreme version of that exclusivity, and he hit us in the face with it on 9/11.

Christianity and Judaism struggled with this issue for centuries, but a
similar internal struggle within Islam to re-examine its texts and
articulate a path for how one can accept pluralism and modernity - and
still be a passionate, devout Muslim - has not surfaced in any serious way.
One hopes that now that the world spotlight has been put on this issue,
mainstream Muslims too will realize that their future in this integrated,
globalized world depends on their ability to reinterpret their past.