Holy War, Holy Peace: How Religion Can Bring Peace to the Middle EastOxford University Press, 2002 M04 11 - 288 páginas The Intifada of 2000-2001 has demonstrated the end of an era of diplomacy in the Arab-Israeli conflict. The style of peacemaking of the Olso Accords has been called into question by the facts on the ground. Elite forms of peacemaking that do not embrace the basic needs of average people on all sides are bound to fail. The complete neglect of deeper cultural and religious systems in the peace process is now apparent, as is the role that this neglect has played in the failure of the process. Building on his earlier book, Between Eden and Armageddon, Gopin provides a detailed blueprint of how the religious traditions in question can become a principal asset in the search for peace and justice. He demonstrates how religious people can be the critical missing link in peacemaking, and how the incorporation of their values and symbols can unleash a new dynamic that directly addresses basic issues of ethics, justice, and peace. Gopin's analysis of the theoretical, theological, and political planes shows us what has been achieved thus far, as well as what must be done next in order to ensure effective final settlement negotiations and secure, sovereign, democratic countries for both peoples. |
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... shared has a way of bringing infinitely complex problems into a manageable cognitive structure of reality, allowing problems of dizzying proportions to be understood by the human mind and absorbed by the human heart. This, in turn, is a ...
... shared has a way of bringing infinitely complex problems into a manageable cognitive structure of reality, allowing problems of dizzying proportions to be understood by the human mind and absorbed by the human heart. This, in turn, is a ...
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... shared? In the absence of love, is there only hatred? Are love and hatred our only capacities? Does love for one person or nation or idea exhaust our prosocial capacity? There is an assumption in the hermeneutic reaction to these ...
... shared? In the absence of love, is there only hatred? Are love and hatred our only capacities? Does love for one person or nation or idea exhaust our prosocial capacity? There is an assumption in the hermeneutic reaction to these ...
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... shared moment, say, “We have the same sense of humor and eating habits; we must be cousins.” I am fascinated by these peculiar moments of relatedness. Generally, they are suppressed in formal negotiations. And yet, religious people or ...
... shared moment, say, “We have the same sense of humor and eating habits; we must be cousins.” I am fascinated by these peculiar moments of relatedness. Generally, they are suppressed in formal negotiations. And yet, religious people or ...
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... and tried to share the way in which there is a competition for superior injury when two groups are at war, especially where there are great imbalances. I shared with the group that I had heard repeatedly from various Arabs, in my.
... and tried to share the way in which there is a competition for superior injury when two groups are at war, especially where there are great imbalances. I shared with the group that I had heard repeatedly from various Arabs, in my.
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... shared sacred texts. A person who wants to be a peacemaker must know and understand the dynamics of such meetings. He must come to master the need for open–ended time frames, that such banter and weaving in and out of serious issues is ...
... shared sacred texts. A person who wants to be a peacemaker must know and understand the dynamics of such meetings. He must come to master the need for open–ended time frames, that such banter and weaving in and out of serious issues is ...
Contenido
Political and Mythic Interdependencies | |
Patterns of Abrahamic Incrimination | |
Conflict Injury and Transformation | |
Act Ritual and Symbol | |
Dialogue as Peacemaking | |
Ritual Civility Moral Practices of Interpersonal Exchange | |
Deescalation Plans and General Steps toward a | |
Specific Steps toward a New Relationship | |
Notes | |
Bibliography | |
Index | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Holy War, Holy Peace: How Religion Can Bring Peace to the Middle East Marc Gopin Vista previa limitada - 2002 |
Holy War, Holy Peace:How Religion Can Bring Peace to the Middle East: How ... Marc Gopin Sin vista previa disponible - 2005 |
Términos y frases comunes
Abrahamic Abrahamic religions acknowledgment adversaries Arab Arab–Israeli Arab–Israeli conflict Arafat authentic basic become behavior biblical Christian commitment compassion conflict resolution constructs context create creative critical cultural destructive dialogue divine efforts elite encounter enemy engage especially ethical example faith feel forgiveness Frohman Furthermore future gestures God’s haredi hermeneutic Holocaust honor human identity important injury interaction interpretation involved Isaac Ishmael Islam Israel Israeli Jerusalem Jewish Jews Judaism justice kind land land of Israel leaders leadership lives Maimonides metaphor Middle East midrashic monotheism monotheistic moral mourning Muslims myth mythic negotiations nonviolent one’s Palestinian peace process peacemaking person political possible prayer profound prosocial psychological Qur’an Rabbi reality reconciliation rejectionists relationship building religion religious traditions repentance ritual role secular sense shared sides social spiritual sulh symbolic Temple Mount teshuva texts third parties Torah transformation treaty values Vamik Volkan victims violence vision words