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Interreligious Peacemaking

17/9/2025

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The situation in the Gaza seems to go from bad to worse. The scenes on our televised news programmes night after night are distressing. This cannot be called a war in the conventional sense as it seems so one sided. Ordinary men and women from both Palestine and Israel are being let down by governments that refuse to listen to their calls for peace. Recently at a demonstration in Palestine against the Hamas government cries of “All of Hamas, out!” were heard. One participant said “The world thinks that Gaza is Hamas and Hamas is Gaza.  "We didn't choose Hamas and now Hamas is determined to rule Gaza and tie our fate to its own. Hamas must retreat." Al- Natour, a columnist in the Washington Post earlier this year wrote "To support Hamas is to be for Palestinian death, not Palestinian freedom".  To engage in such opposition is both courageous and dangerous and Amnesty International has documented what it calls “a disturbing pattern of threats, intimidation and harassment, including interrogations and beatings by Hamas against peaceful protesters”.

So too there have been increasing demonstrations calling for peace and the return of the hostages in Israel, which are obviously being ignored by their government.  Recently an international coalition of over 80 orthodox rabbis urged Israel to confront the widespread starvation in Gaza and condemn extremist settler violence. In a statement entitled “A Call for Moral Clarity, Responsibility, and a Jewish Orthodox Response in the Face of the Gaza Humanitarian Crisis” the signatories emphasize their deep bond with Israel and acknowledge the atrocities committed by Hamas but insist that this does not absolve Israel of responsibility for the humanitarian crisis in Gaza. “The heart of Torah is justice, not revenge” it states. “This moment demands a different voice—one grounded in our deepest Jewish values and informed by our traumatic history of persecution. We must affirm that Judaism’s vision of justice and compassion extends to all human beings…..  Let us be resounding voices for justice, righteousness, and peace for all people—even and especially in the hardest of times.”

But how do we as Christians respond to the dreadful situation in the land that gave birth to Jesus?  Christianity is a faith that upholds justice, and many of us have a particular concern for the poor and oppressed. We call out injustice when we see it.  Regarding the situation in the Middle East this means showing support for Palestine and being overt in criticising the State of Israel and taking it for granted that others share this opinion. To even suggest there might be another way of looking at things is to provoke an angry response and dismissal as someone who supports injustice and stands with the oppressor.  In my experience there is usually no willingness to engage in a conversation about it as it is so obvious that there  will be no peace in Israel/Gaza without justice and we must call out the injustice because it is obvious where right lies. And so, we have statement after statement calling for peace, demonstration after demonstration in support of Palestine, event after event telling of the sufferings of the Palestinian people.

This, however, is not the way of interreligious dialogue. While it is true that there will be no peace without justice, so too there will be no justice without peace.  What would it mean to make peacebuilding rather than justice the focus of our concern? Hans Kung gave us the formula for this many years ago “there will be no peace in the world without peace between the religions; there will be no peace between the religions without dialogue among the religions”. The way of peace is the way of dialogue. For those of us involved in interfaith an important element in our work is not to allow international conflicts to destroy good relations at home. The reality of the Israel/Palestine conflict has done just that and led to an increase in antisemitism and anti-Israel sentiment so that some members of the Jewish community are afraid to admit openly that they are Jewish and feel unsafe in Scotland for the first time in their lives.  A recent public gathering to remember and pray for the hostages taken by Hamas on October 7th 2023 had pro- Palestinian supporters calling the participants rats, lizards, reptiles and baby-killers, the kind of language that encourages hatred and is often a forerunner of violence.  

The Jewish community in Scotland is not responsible for the decisions and actions of the Israeli government, just as the catholic community in Scotland was not responsible for the actions of the IRA in the past. Many of them will not agree with the government and I have not met anyone who would support Netanyahu. However, they do have a love of Israel and a belief in the State of Israel’s right to self -determination. For them Israel is the only place in the world where they feel truly safe. The chant heard on peace marches and at peace events “from the river to the sea Palestine will be free” comes from Hamas who style themselves as an Islamic Resistance Movement and have declared in their Covenant of 1988 that they want the obliteration of the Jewish State, the establishment of an Islamic one and that they reject all peace negotiations. They contend that the Jews were behind “the French Revolution, the Communist revolution and most of the revolutions we heard and hear about, here and there. With their money they formed secret societies, such as Freemasons, Rotary Clubs, the Lions and others in different parts of the world for the purpose of sabotaging societies and achieving Zionist interests....  They were behind World War I, when they were able to destroy the Islamic Caliphate, making financial gains and controlling resources. They obtained the Balfour Declaration, formed the League of Nations through which they could rule the world. They were behind World War II, through which they made huge financial gains by trading in armaments, and paved the way for the establishment of their state. It was they who instigated the replacement of the League of Nations with the United Nations and the Security Council to enable them to rule the world through them. There is no war going on anywhere, without having their finger in it. Israel, Judaism and Jews challenge Islam and the Moslem people. "May the cowards never sleep."

These kind of stories are not unknown in the West and over the centuries such scurrilous tales including blood libels that believed Jews used the blood of Christian children in the leaven bread of Passover led through the centuries to pogroms, forced conversions and expulsions. It was the centuries of Christian antisemitism that led to the growth of a Zionist movement that worked for the establishment of a Jewish State. So the cry “from the river to the sea…. “ heard during peace marches and demonstrations is heard and interpreted  quite differently by the Jewish community than it will be by many demonstrating who know nothing of its origins and think they are only calling for peace. 

I often hear the Balfour Declaration blamed for the situation in Palestine and it is true that to expect two nations to inhabit the same piece of land without any help on how this should be done was short-sighted if not down right wrong but the Balfour Declaration did not come from no-where and the situation might have been quite different if there had not been the dreadful history of Christian antisemitism. 

This year we celebrate the 60th anniversary of Nostra Aetate which came into being after a Jewish historian, Jules Isaac, had met Pope John XXIII and pointed out the ways in which the Christian scriptures and scripture teaching had been interpreted in anti- Jewish ways.  The document began a new relationship with the Jewish community. It rejected traditional anti- Jewish tropes and accepted our need for a new dialogue and understanding of Judaism.  I hope that the situation in Gaza does not overshadow the work that still needs to be done in listening to our brothers and sisters in faith. 

Let us then celebrate this anniversary by engaging in some kind of Christian – Jewish dialogue, learning to stand in another’s shoes, understanding how things might look from another perspective and in  so doing know that we are indeed engaging in practical peace-making and making the world that bit a safer place for us all to live.


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An Unusual Dialogue

4/9/2025

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I had a very interesting interfaith encounter this weekend. It was a visit to new Hindu Mandir in East Renfrewshire. What was so interesting about this visit was that the temple is located in a former orthodox synagogue which has recently closed and merged with another synagogue fairly close by. The Hindu community had been looking for a place of worship and were delighted to be able to lease the synagogue as a place already sacred and dedicated to prayer. The visit was organised by the West of Scotland Council of Christians and Jews and as well as members of the branch of CCJ a number of Jews who were members of the Reform Synagogue (now known as the Progressive Synagogue with the merger of Reform and Liberal Judaism) that is just behind the Mandir, curious to see how the synagogue had been adapted to the Hindu community’s needs.

Judaism and Hinduism are very different religions. Sometimes students of religious studies group religions by similar characteristics. One way of doing this – at least for Christians – is to think of them as displaying protestant and catholic traits. Protestant faiths would be Judaism, Islam and certain schools of Buddhism such as Zen. These religions have simple prayer rituals, are devoid of images and focus very much on the word. Catholic faiths on the other hand are usually more colourful, with images, smells and bells and a more stylised liturgy. Hinduism would come in to this category as would Tibetan Buddhism. As an orthodox synagogue the building in Newton Mearns would have had no images or colourful decoration, the Ark which housed the Torah Scrolls would have taken centre stage, the congregation would have been seated in pews and religious dress would have been a prayer shawl and kippah worn by men but not by women. As a Hindu Temple, the Ark and the Bimah or platform from which the Scriptures would have been read had been removed which gave an empty space in the middle of the temple and the focus was a highly decorated shrine with several statues of Hindu deities. I wondered how Jewish friends would feel about this change and thought some might feel uncomfortable. But no, the Jews who visited last Sunday were delighted to be there and very happy to make contact with the community. Perhaps this was because they came from the Reform Synagogue though some of them had attended services in that synagogue.

We entered the building through the main entrance which had Hebrew writing over it telling us “ Happy are those who dwell in Your house; they forever praise You”. We  were very warmly welcomed by the President of the Mandir before taking off our shoes in the cloakroom and mounting the stairs to the temple itself. There were several people around and obvious preparations for events happening that afternoon, but the prayer space itself was empty as the formal worship, called puja, had not yet started. The pews from the synagogue surrounded the space where the community would be sitting on the floor, many of them carrying the names of members of the Jewish community whom I suppose had paid for that seat. It was not hard to imagine the spirit of those people and the energy of their prayers still being around and somehow adding to the energy and good will of the Hindu puja. Fanciful? Perhaps. I do believe that places of worship that have been prayed in for years and in some cases centuries do have an energy that comes from the faith of the worshippers and that all things are connected and interrelated in a way that reaches to the past as well as the present and future. It was not hard for me to imagine those members of the Jewish community embracing their Hindu brothers and sisters as they prayed.

 There was time for dialogue and learning more about the community. We learned that the Hindu approach to God is two-fold – manifest and unmanifest. The manifest takes the form of pictures and statues as a focus for the mind but leads to an experience and sense of God as unmanifest, a Mystery acknowledged by all religions including Judaism and Christianity. The Mandir is called Mother Earth Temple which is so appropriate for the times we live in and reflects the Hindu connection to the earth which is regarded as a Sacred Goddess who is the mother of every form of life that has ever taken birth from her and has lived upon her. Whatever one’s background, and whatever name one knows God by, Mother Earth unites us. The community wants the temple to be a space for people of all faiths and none to pause, meditate and reflect, to re-establish unity while sharing and celebrating diversity. 

Despite the strangeness and the differences between Hinduism and Judaism everyone felt very at home and began to see connections. Both religions follow a lunar calendar which means they are often celebrating festivals at the same time; both religions have a plethora of festivals and often these festivals last for days at a time; there is a perambulation round the shrine in Hinduism and round the Synagogue at the feast of Sukkot and Simcha Torah.  

​This year Sukkot takes place early in October. It celebrates a successful harvest and is a reminder of the time the Israelites spent in the desert after the Exodus. It is celebrated by building a sukkah - a temporary hut which has a roof made of plants, fruits or leaves, and families eat meals and spend time in it during the festival. There will be one outside the Reform Synagogue, so the rabbi promised an invitation to the Hindu community. They were delighted. This hopefully will be the beginning of a friendship and dialogue which I suspect will be unique in the world of interreligious dialogue. I look forward to seeing how it flourishes.

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    I am  a Catholic nun, involved in interfaith relations for many decades.  For me this has been an exciting and sacred journey which I would like to share with others.

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