Robert Spencer

|

Pamela Geller

|

Bat Ye'or

|

Brigitte Gabriel

|

Daniel Pipes

|

Debbie Schlussel

|

Walid Shoebat

|

Joe Kaufman

|

Wafa Sultan

|

Geert Wilders

|

The Nuclear Card

Temple and Mosque Collaboration Seeks to Become a National Interfaith Model

Posted on 08 June 2012 by Garibaldi

We need more of this:

Temple and mosque collaboration seeks to become a national interfaith model

By Ruxandra Guidi

Sitting at an outdoor cafe, wearing knee-high black leather boots and hip sunglasses, Sarah Bassin doesn’t look like most people’s idea of a rabbi. She’s young, lively, and personable. Bassin believes in the need for greater Jewish and Muslim dialogue. From her perspective, it’s a no-brainer.

“The greatest predictor for whether somebody is going to be Islamophobic, is if they already hold anti-Semitic beliefs,” she says.

Research indicates that both Muslims and Jews tend to suffer equally from discrimination and hate crimes; that’s one experience that these two faiths have in common.

“A lot of the way the fight against Islamophobia has been framed for communities outside of the Muslim community is, that’s the right thing to do,” says Bassin. “And that’s true. I think it’s also important to speak to that added element of self-interest. It’s not just this altruism, that we’re reaching out and saying this is an issue that needs to be addressed: It’s an issue of self-protection, right?”

Self-protection, the idea of defending one’s beliefs and religious identity, is only one of the many issues taken on by a project called NewGround.

The idea came in the summer of 2006, around the breakout of a 34-day conflict in Lebanon that pitted the Israeli military against the militant group, Hezbollah. The war also pitted Muslim and Jewish religious leaders here in Los Angeles–over which side was wrong, and who Americans should support.

Things got so bad that Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa convened a task force to bring Muslim and Jewish leaders to the same table. This effort gave birth to NewGround, a joint fellowship project by the Progressive Jewish Alliance and the Muslim Public Affairs Council. In 2011, NewGround became independent from these two organizations; today, it is housed within the city’s Human Relations Commission.

On a recent night at Temple Emanuel in Beverly Hills, a group of about 20 people — Muslims and Jews, young and old; not all of them devout — sit in a circle and discuss their faith. Over the past three months, this group has been meeting weekly to ponder big questions and figure out exactly what makes them a Jew, or a Muslim.

“People feel very strongly, and they can talk about their experiences as a white person, or as a black person, or as an Asian American person. They can talk a lot about gender, you know, male or female,” says Tasneem Noor, one of the facilitators. “But for a lot of people when it comes to religion, there’s I think, a lot of exploration that needs to be done on that level.”

A lot of these NewGround explorations can be somewhat esoteric: Do all Muslims read lines in the Quran in the same way? What’s the difference between how Jews and Muslims think of heaven?

Kiran Hashmi and her husband first heard about NewGround last Ramadan, as they attended a service at the King Fahad Mosque in Culver City.

Read the rest here…

  • Sarah Brown

    Yes, in the ME there is generally a high degree of antisemitism – I think that is an objective fact, and I suppose that carries through to immigrants in Europe to some degree. BUT – interesting to note – and cheerful from an interfaith if not from a Spanish perspective – that Israeli Arabs (not all of whom will be Muslims though) seem to be less antisemitic than Spaniards

    http://www.jpost.com/MiddleEast/Article.aspx?id=168176

    Only 2.3% of Spaniards are Muslim, by the way.

  • Steve

    @Sarah, interesting reports, thanks. I wonder how much anti-semitism in europe is driven by the huge increases in muslim immigration:

    “While European views towards Jews have become more negative, the deepest anti-Jewish sentiments exist outside of Europe, especially in predominantly Muslim nations. The percentage of Turks, Egyptians, Jordanians, Lebanese and Pakistanis with favorable opinions of Jews is in the single digits.”

    @Kahlid, where are religious dietary laws being “scapegoated gloriously in Europe”? There has been some discussion on the matter, that’s about it.

  • Sarah Brown

    Steve – here is quite an interesting piece. It suggests that there is indeed some very rough correlation between anti-Muslim and antisemitic views, in that the Spanish do very poorly on both counts, and the UK and US do quite well.

    http://www.pewglobal.org/2008/09/17/unfavorable-views-of-jews-and-muslims-on-the-increase-in-europe/

    I believe in the UK there are (proportionately) more antisemitic hate crimes

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1537128/Jews-far-more-likely-to-be-victims-of-faith-hatred-than-Muslims.html

    This is quite an old report though – anyway, it’s not a competition,and here is a piece about how the UK’s Jewish Community Security Trust is helping Muslims record and deal with hate crime based on their own experiences.

    http://blog.thecst.org.uk/?p=3459

  • Khalid

    @Steve

    You don’t have to dig that deep…
    Observe the loon-tactics:

    “The Jooze” control the world.
    “The Mooslims” are taking over.

    The religious discrimination isn’t also hard to find; the religious similarities are striking, Kosher and Halal meat are prepared in nearly the same way, much of the other dietary laws exist for both religious groups (Alchohol, Pork) and both are being scapegoated gloriously in Europe.

  • Sam Seed

    Jews and Muslims worship the One God. Muslims believe that Jesus is the Messiah whilst Jews consider him as a teacher.

  • Steve

    “Research indicates that both Muslims and Jews tend to suffer equally from discrimination and hate crimes”

    I would be interested in seeing this research,

  • mindy1

    This is AWESOME!!! :D :D This is EXACTLY what is needed to counter the haters of the world :D

Advertise Here
Advertise Here