Islam and Global Dialogue Religious Pluralism and the Pursuit of Peace

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Daoud Rosser-Owen

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Edited by Dr Roger Boase with Foreword by HRH Prince Hassan bin
Talal. Essays by John Bowden, Diana Eck, Muhammad Legenhausen,
Francis Robinson, William Dalrymple, Akbar Ahmed, Fred Halliday,
Jonathan Sacks, Antony Sullivan, Robert Crane, Khaled Abou El Fadl,
Tony Bayfield, Norman Solomon, Marcus Braybrooke, Frank Gelli,
Murad Hofmann, Roger Boase, Jeremy Henzell-Thomas, Mahmud
Ayoub, Wendell Berry.
SPEAKERS
Roger Boase: The question that we are discussing this evening is “What role
can religion play in promoting peace instead of war and other forms of violence?”
This is the one of the main questions that my book Islam and Global
Dialogue seeks to answer.
I began the book in October 2001 after participating in a conference
organised by the Association of Muslim Social Scientists, entitled “Unity
and Diversity: Islam, Muslims, and the Challenge of Pluralism.” Already
before 11 September 2001 Islam was widely portrayed in the media as a belligerent
and intolerant religion, incompatible with democracy and civilised
values. Half of those who responded to an opinion poll in the United States
in the year 2000 thought that Islam supported terrorism.
There was, and still is, much discussion about holy war, as if war can
ever be holy! I do not now intend to define jihad. That would take too long ...

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