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Introduction To escape such a predicament, world religions have long sought alternative approaches to interfaith encounters. Mystical traditions of non-Western societies notwithstanding, Christian theology seems to have been the first to examine seriously the possibility of exploring the beliefs of the adherents of other religions without the intent to convert or to repudiate them. Two early modern theological developments paved the way to the current interfaith dialogue: Friedrich Schleiermacher’s statement that God is available, to some degree, in all religions, but that Christianity is nevertheless superior to all has led to what is today known as “Inclusivism”. Ernst Troeltch’s view that every culture’s claim can only be viewed as its peculiar apprehension of the divine and William James’ emphasis on the centrality of individual experience in diverse religious milieus has ushered in the current schools of thought that advocate “Pluralism”. As such, the twentieth century’s unprecedented tolerance of spiritual diversity in the name of interfaith dialogue marks a distinct triumph of intellectual curiosity and spiritual empathy over the naive or learned quest of isolation. This essay will explore simpler paradigms that anticipate the contemporary models of interfaith dialogue. They are expressed in parables and fictional narratives of pre-modern or early modern cultures. I shall explore Saadi’s “Ironic Detachment”, Cooper’s “Pragmatist Acceptance”, Rumi’s “Ordained Diversity”, and Tolstoy’s “Perspectivist Tolerance”. Of the four approaches presented here two are Eastern and decidedly pre-modern. The other two belong to the Western and early modern era. There is, I will argue, a correspondence between the Eastern and Western approaches. Saadi and Cooper propose a practical, common-sense approach; while Rumi and Tolstoy seek a deeper spiritual solution. Therefore, instead of a conventional grouping of the two 13th century Eastern poet-philosophers and the two 19th century Western novelists together, I have interspersed them based on the affinity of their respective views.1 Needless to say, this typology is meant to be neither exhaustive of types of early interfaith dialogue, nor of the instances belonging to each type. I. Saadi’s Ironic Detachment
Saadi’s mystical counterpart, Hafez (1325-1389) who despised hypocritical and superficial fanaticism in faith, describes the endless intra-religious contests in similar terms, as a false and futile exercise: Pardon the battle of the seventy two denominations, As they missed the truth they took the path of illusions.5 This approach seems to suggest that in religious bickering both sides are equally misguided, indeed, ludicrous. Hence the authors seem to admonish against direct and accusatory engagement with one’s religious counterparts. These sages, while incontrovertibly anchored within their own religious beliefs and practices, expose the absurdity of deeming other beliefs and practices false. Such refusal to engage in rhetorical and partisan debate paves the way for a genuine interfaith dialogue. Three centuries after Saadi, Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592), the renowned French Renaissance thinker, voiced a similar opinion about the capricious nature of traditional beliefs and practices: In view of such arbitrariness, he advocated religious tolerance.6 This skeptical view of custom found such advocates as Descartes and Pascal in the succeeding generations of French thinkers. In the subsequent centuries other European authors and philosophers employed variations on the theme of ironic detachment to underscore II. James Fenimore Cooper’s Pragmatic Acceptance
Thus Natty, whom James Fenimore Cooper has characterized as the “American Adam”13, articulates an authentic maxim of the early American immigrant experience: pragmatic acceptance of all despite the apparent incommensurability of beliefs. Lest Cooper’s approach is dismissed as an isolated and romantic glance at the encounter of European and Native American cultures, let’s recall that Charles Henry Dana, who published his classic Two Years before the Mast at the same time, found the same attributes among the Hawaiian Kanaka that Cooper had ascribed to East Coast Indians. Indeed, there is a curious parallel between the accounts of Dana’s real life friendship with Hope, the Sandwich Islander and the imagined friendship of Natty and Chigachgook. Only after four months of association with the Kanakas Dana would proclaim:
It is with deep pathos, then, that Dana, himself a practicing Christian, recounts, in words reminiscent of Cooper’s Natty Bumpo, the tragedy of Sandwich Islanders:
The curious consonance of Cooper’s novels and Dana’s memoirs corroborates the authenticity of the American emerging attitude toward intercultural and interfaith dialogue. Of course, seen from a strict logical vantage point, this approach offers no theoretical solution for the apparent mutual exclusion of faiths sanctioned by the dogma of traditional religions, but it is intuitively appealing and pragmatically viable. III. Leo Tolstoy’s Perspectivist Tolerance The event is characterized as a sudden illumination, although Levin felt he had always been implicitly aware of it. One of the most important attributes of this revelation is the way in which Levin comes to reconcile the absolute universality of faith with the historical particularity of the religion (Christian church.). Further, he finds a way of acknowledging the truth claims of other religions while holding on to his own faith. Indeed it is the question of the validity of other faiths that sets him on the path to a reverie of discovery: “What is the relationship to it [Christian faith] of the beliefs of the Buddhists and Muslims who also teach and do good”?15 Levin contemplates this enigma, sitting in his dusky room and gazing at the momentary flashes of a receding storm that obscure the majesty of the dark empty sky with its eternal constellations, the Milky Way, prominently streaking it. Suddenly a beguiling analogy occurs to him: Thus a model of interfaith dialogue is proposed that sacrifices neither the universality of the truth, nor the particularity of beliefs and rituals that aim to capture and consecrate it within specific cultural traditions. IV. Rumi’s Decreed Diversity
Moses’ sharp rebuke plunges the illiterate shepherd into agonizing despair:
He wanders off chastened and utterly vanquished by Moses’ unrelenting verdict. But the story does not end here:
But ironically, the shepherd is not able to recapture his naiveté. Moses’ rebuke has elevated his spirit to new heights:
The theme of the unimportance of apparent religious differences against the backdrop of the ultimate unity of spiritual paths is central to Islamic mysticism. Farid ud Din Attar (1142-1220), one of Rumi’s sources of inspiration, allegorically conveyed it in his fable of the birds. Conclusion Although I have, hitherto, deliberately avoided comparing these early pioneers of interfaith dialogue with their modern counterparts, it would be instructive to consider how they would relate to contemporary theological debates concerning interfaith dialogue. In my opinion, Saadi and Cooper advocated variations on the theme of “Pluralism”, while Rumi and Tolstoy may be characterized as proponents of “Inclusivism”. It may further elucidate their positions if we distinguish them by their respective levels of strength. The table on this page summarizes the above:
One common denominator between the precursors of interfaith dialogue and their contemporary counterparts is their common intercultural experiences. All four of the authors we have discussed here were products of liminal or transcultural circumstances, where one gains a novel perspective on one’s native culture and indigenous beliefs. Saadi was an avid world traveler. Rumi had converted from a legalistic and ritualistic belief to a mystical and spiritual faith and, in his spiritual quest, had wandered far away from home. Cooper was at the epicenter of the immigrant experience in New York and witnessed not only the amalgamation of multi-ethnic settler communities but the assimilation and gradual evanescence of the Native American cultures in the American frontier. And Tolstoy, the cosmopolitan aristocrat, stood at the threshold of the historic transformation of Russia from an isolated Feudal country into a complex modern society. All four theories bear witness that interfaith dialogue has been with us in spirit, if not in letter, throughout the second millennium. Postscript “God Is Too Big to Fit into a Single Religion” This invitation to ecumenism, humorous as it looked in those bold dancing fonts, reminded me of the long odyssey of the ideas of tolerance, inclusivism, pluralism, and interfaith understanding; and of how far we have come on the path of recognizing both the utter universality and the unique singularity of our spiritual experiences. Post-postscript Dr. Mahmoud Sadri is Associate Professor of Sociology, Texas Woman’s University, Denton, Texas, USA. This article was given as a paper at the Fourth Annual International Conference on Africa and Globalisation for the Common Good, the Quest for Justice and Peace, held in Kericho, Kenya, 21-24 April 2005. Notes 2 The Encyclopedia Britannica offers a succinct account of his life. 3 It is worth noting that Saadi’s larger insight into the essential unity of mankind, set in a famous couplet, adorns one of the halls of the United Nations: The humankind are the limbs of one frame, As in creation their origin is the same. If fate causes one of the limb to sting, Others too will cry in suffering. 4 Sheikh Mosleh al Din Sa’di of Shiraz, Golestan (Rose Garden) The Book of “Adab e Sohbat” (The Manners of Companionship), 1985. Eghbal Publications, Tehran. 5 Mohammad Shams al Din Hafez of Shiraz, Divan e Ghazalliat (Compendium of poetry), Ghazal (sonnet) 184. The number 72 in this poem is a reference to a saying attributed to the Prophet of Islam in which he prophesied as many as seventy two eventual sectarian interpretations of Islam. 6 Religion, Montaigne argued, is “beyond the reach of human reason.” Therefore, “any error is more excusable in such as are not endowed, through the divine bounty, with an extraordinary illumination from above.” It is conceivable that the ravages of the infamous thirty year “Wars of Religion” (562-1598) influenced Montaigne’s advocacy of indulgence for those with “besotted” understanding of religion. 7 The above examples notwithstanding, cognitive generosity toward other cultures remained sporadic throughout these centuries. Cross cultural empathy was reserved only for those who submitted to religious conversion and cultural assimilation; a fate illustrated in the transformation of “Friday” from a savage to a Christian in Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe. In absence of such a conversion, even the admittedly virtuous unbelievers are relegated to eternal damnation. We find them confined in Dante’s Inferno for no greater offense than being born before Christ. Of particular poignancy is the fate of Mohammad and Ali, the prophet of Islam and his successor, who are depicted eternally slit “by one great stroke upward from chin to crest.” The reason: “All these whom thou beholdest in the pit, Were Sowers of scandal, sowers of schism abroad, While they yet lived; therefore they now go slit.” (canto XXVIII, 28-36) 8 Thomas Hardy, Jude the Obscure, p. 135. Hardy’s agnostic approach and his hostility toward organized religion is evident in his other works and has been the subject of extended commentary. 9 Here I am using the dichotomy of attitudes: Inner directed/Other directed from the classical publication of the Sociologist David Reisman, The Lonely Crowd to describe Cooper’s protagonists. 10 The Last of the Mohicans (1826), Prairie (1827), Pioneers ( 1831), Pathfinder (1840), Deerslayer (1841). 11Actually, Chingachgook, had converted to Christianity, but Cooper elucidates, in great amusing detail, how little the new faith had impacted his spiritual approach toward the world, and how deeply and totally steeped in his Native American beliefs he had been all along. 12 James Fenimore Cooper, The Last of the Mohicans, 1826, 1980, New York, Signet Classics, p. 373. 13 James Fenimore Cooper, Pathfinder, 1840. 14 For example, Levin lends his diaries, detailing his reckless youthful exploits to his fiancée, Kitty, as a way to atone for his sins and to be honest with his wife. Tolstoy did the same thing with his prospective wife Sonia. Similarly, in a period of despair, Levin keeps a rope nearby in case he decides to end his life. Tolstoy reports the same about his own life. 15 My Confession, pp. 684-5. F. A Flowers III, in his preface to Tolstoy’s The Gospel in Brief states that Tolstoy undertook an in-depth study of Buddhism, Islam and Christianity” (p. 9) in his search for true spirituality. 16 Encyclopedia Britannica for a brief biographical sketch of Rumi’s life. 17 This allegory refers to the Islamic practice of washing the body of the deceased with water in a prescribed ritual manner. Every trace of blood (considered impure in the Islamic tradition) must be scrupulously removed. However, the body of the martyrs are absolved from this requirement. Therefore, an agent of contamination, blood, is rendered pure. 18 Rumi, Mathnavi, Book II, verses 1727, 1729, 1731, 1748, 1736, 1750-51, 1759, 1757, 1753, 1766-67, 1762, 1777, 1783, 1784-86, 1787-90, 1791. 19 Among the contemporaries, the wanderings of Thomas Merton are legendary. John Hick attributes his conversion, from an exclusivist evangelical Christian into a pluralist advocate of a religious “Copernican Revolution”, to his association with members of Islamic, Buddhist, Sikh, and Hindu communities in Birmingham. In their homes and places of worship he realized “something that is obvious enough once noticed”, that is: “different faith communities see and respond to different ‘faces’ of the infinite transcendent Reality.” (Okholm, Dennis and Phillips, Timothy (eds.), Four Views on Salvation in a Pluralistic World. 1995. Zondervan Publishing House, Grand Rapids. pp. 13, 38, 91). Such an intercultural empathetic intuition that is rather frequent for the citizens |
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