To the sorrow of us and our visitors, we had only one hour for discussion, but it was a very worthwhile discussion. I made brief notes as the visitors asked questions or offered comments. In some cases I only have notes about the thought provoking questions. I think you will find them interesting.
Question/comment 1 (from a visitor):
Everyone we have spoken to in the US, everywhere we have been, regardless of culture or religion or their origins or the origins of their ancestors, sees him or herself as American. It applies to Muslims, Christians, Jews, everyone. Why is that? What brings that about?
Question 2/comment 2 (from a visitor):
Before he received his message, the Prophet had a meeting of various faiths that existed at the time and in the area. He said: "We have your faith and we have ours". That is always the case in for Muslims.
Question/comment 3 (from IFC):
What is the relationship between church and state in your countries?
Answer (visitor):
It differs among our countries.
The role of religion in all of our countries is different than in western countries. Islam does not only address spiritual things, but is more deeply involved in many aspects of daily life. I am seeing some commonalities between US history and what our countries are seeing now [a reference to the revolts underway in many countries in their region].
Some governments are trying to use religion to give themselves legitimacy. Islamic scholars contradict governments. Populations give more legitimacy to scholars than to governments. There are two elements at work now:
- Secular - separation of church and state (eliminate religion as a justification for the government). But those people are the minority.
- Religious stream - build a democratic system based on religion.
Israel accommodates multiple legal systems. These include Jewish law, sharia law, and civil law,
Question/comment 4 (from a visitor):
Power in the US comes from the coexistence of groups (ie, the Interfaith Council).
Arabs and Muslims generally want peace and it should result from the fruits of the revolutions now occurring.
Tunisia may have a different view than other countries. Islamists were partners, not leaders, of the Tunisian revolt. Now a debate is happening on the role religion should have. A very serious is underway.
Question/comment 5 (from a visitor):
The dialog among us (the visitors) is valuable. We have differing opinions and learn from each other.
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