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Rahim Kanani

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Tony Blair on Interfaith Dialogue, Education and Globalization

Posted: 11/10/10 01:00 AM ET

In a recent interview with former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, we discussed his attendance at the 2010 Clinton Global Initiative held earlier this year, the work of his Faith Foundation, and the importance of understanding religion in a rapidly globalizing world.

Rahim Kanani: What brought you to the Clinton Global Initiative earlier this year and what was the Face to Faith initiative launched that week?

Tony Blair: My Faith Foundation shares a similar vision with the Clinton Global Initiative (CGI); globalization is pushing different races, cultures and creeds closer together than ever before and there is an urgent need to build bridges of understanding between these communities to avoid tensions and conflicts arising and to shape a more integrated global community. Our approach is also very similar; we put an emphasis on action; moving beyond dialogue, although this is important too. In doing this, we provide practical ways for individuals to realize change and be part of a global movement. At my Faith Foundation we ask ordinary people of different faiths, cultures and beliefs to take action together towards achieving the Millennium Development Goals by holding awareness raising events within their local communities.

I am delighted that my Faith Foundation has partnered with the CGI and we have begun working together toward this shared goal. All CGI members must commit to a specific and measurable action. My Foundation's global schools program, Face to Faith, which brings 11- 16 year olds together in 15 countries all over the world to learn directly from each other using video-conferencing and an online community became part of the "Partners for a New Beginning" (PNB) commitment. PNB is a vision which President Obama set out just over a year ago in Egypt for a new beginning between the United States and the Muslim world. Face to Faith is going to help make this vision a reality by expanding into the U.S. and building strong links between young people in the US and in a number of Muslim-majority countries including Pakistan, Jordan, the Palestinian Territories, Lebanon, Egypt, the UAE and Indonesia.

Rahim Kanani: While your Faith Foundation's primary goal is to promote and foster understanding amongst the world's major religions, and the Face to Faith initiative you've described focuses on secondary school students engaging in interfaith and intercultural understanding, what is the role of colleges and universities in tackling interfaith education? Should such instruction be required learning in such a setting?

Tony Blair: My Foundation believes that young people have a pivotal role to play in building a harmonious modern world. After all, they are tomorrow's leaders. It is therefore vital for students to have a firm grasp on the relationship between faith and globalization. So as well as a schools program my Foundation also has a universities program - the Faith and Globalization Initiative.

Seven universities around the world are currently part of the network: Yale University in the USA, The National University of Singapore, The University of Western Australia, Technologico de Monterrey University in Mexico, McGill University in Canada, Peking University in China and Durham University in the UK. The Faith and Globalization students who are drawn from a huge range of disciplines including international relations, law, theology, economics and business studies are examining the impact of religious faith on politics, business, society, and development in an increasingly globalized society. The focus here is on making the research findings from the university network accessible, meaningful and relevant to policymakers through publications, conferences and policy papers.

Each university customises the course to suit their local contexts and explores aspects of globalization which are particularly relevant to them, for example the key themes in Religions in the Contemporary World at the National University of Singapore are Religion and Technology, Urban Religiosity and Merchandising Religion which reflects the importance of technology in Singapore's rapidly expanding economy.

Rahim Kanani: A few years ago, His Highness the Aga Khan spoke to National Public Radio and questioned the definition of an 'educated person' today in the West as one devoid of any knowledge of the Islamic world. Is this divide narrowing, or expanding, and what are some concrete steps the Western world can take to achieve both short-term understanding on immediate issues such as the so-called "Ground Zero Mosque" debate in New York City but also long-term understanding between the West and the Muslim World stretching future generations.

Tony Blair: I don't think there are any short term fixes to building relations between different faith groups and nor should we be seeking them. We want to build deep, meaningful, long term relationships and this takes time.

The work we do to connect students in the US with Muslim majority countries through the Clinton Global Initiative will go a long way to nurturing a generation with a greater level of respect, understanding and appreciation for the view points of Muslims. Face to Faith will be introduced into US public and private schools at the start of term in several states across the country including Utah, California, New York, Washington and Georgia. Indeed at Brighton High School in Utah, which is one of the first schools in the US to begin Face to Faith, the ground zero mosque was one of the first issues explored by the students. Face to Faith provides students with a safe space to discuss controversial issues such as these.

Interfaith relations are definitely improving and there is a growing appetite and enthusiasm to build relations between those of different beliefs particularly among young people. My Foundation, in collaboration with the Interfaith Youth Core, runs a youth leadership program called the Faiths Act Fellowship. The Fellowship brings together 30 outstanding young leaders inspired by faith and in multi-faith pairs, so for example a Muslim and a Christian or a Jew and a Sikh. And they work together within development and faith based organisations to build partnerships between people of different cultures and beliefs in their local communities in the US, Canada, UK and from next year, India. Applications for the second cohort of Fellows have recently opened up. We've had a great response so far and I would encourage people to go to www.faithsactfellows.org to find out more.

Rahim Kanani: Within this context, how can we take the work of your Faith Foundation to scale? What kinds of partnerships need to be formed, what kinds of commitments need to be made, and what kinds of barriers need to be removed for this kind of interfaith effort to reach the masses?

Tony Blair: Within the context of the commitment we have made to the Clinton Global Initiative we are going to dramatically scale up the work we are doing with US schools; over the next two years the Foundation will increase its work in the USA, from 40 schools to 120 schools. We are working with 790 teachers, involving 395 schools and a range of Governments to move towards mainstreaming interactive education about different religions, cultures and beliefs into the national curriculum.

We also have volunteers in over 100 countries all over the world. We don't want to duplicate any of the great work that faith based organisation's are already doing. What we do want to do is help to raise the profile and expand the great work that is already out there. For example we fund Project Muso, an NGO founded by American Orthodox Jews and led by the local Muslim community in Yirimadjo in Mali which works mainly with women to provide access to healthcare for the poorest.

Rahim Kanani: And lastly, what was the impetus that sparked you to form such a foundation that focused on global interreligious understanding?

Tony Blair: Religious faith has a major part to play in shaping the values which guide the modern world. It can and should be a force for progress. I also think that understanding our increasingly globalized world today requires an understanding of religion and people of religious faith. Our world is getting smaller and there are a lot of misrepresentations about religions and people of religious faith. My Foundation is about recognizing the great work that so many people of faith do each day, motivated by their religion, as well as helping to bring more people of different faiths together to work on some of the world's most pressing problems.

Cross-posted with RahimKanani.com

Future interviews include Drew Faust, President of Harvard University, Malcolm Rogers, Director of the Museum of Fine Arts Boston, Judith Rodin, President of the Rockefeller Foundation, Margaret Spellings, former U.S. Secretary of Education, and more. Please follow me on twitter to be notified of their publication.

 

Follow Rahim Kanani on Twitter: www.twitter.com/rahimkanani

In a recent interview with former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, we discussed his attendance at the 2010 Clinton Global Initiative held earlier this year, the work of his Faith Foundation, and the...
In a recent interview with former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, we discussed his attendance at the 2010 Clinton Global Initiative held earlier this year, the work of his Faith Foundation, and the...
 
 
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kadene
wordsmith
08:02 AM on 11/11/2010
Children are basically taught values through the carrot/stick motivational process. It appears that mankind on the whole, were motivated through the same process provided by religion. But children grow into adults, and in like manner, mankind needs to grow up too, face responsibility for its own actions and deal with reality. Continuing to Harbor comforting beliefs born in the imaginations of fearful and ignorant forebears is like a nine year old who won't let go of the pacifier and still wants to suck at the nipple.
It is comforting to know, even though I won't be around to witness mankind breaking free of its stranglehold, that with each new generation, faith will recede more into obscurity and will one day be studied as a mere stage in the development of the species. Oh, if I only could come back then!! Pity.
07:20 AM on 11/11/2010
In the bible written, God said: In the end of times the old R---- E will rear its ugly head again,  for the last time. God even names it. Interesting?
07:16 AM on 11/11/2010
He just became a Catholic.  Very Interesting? Read the Bible, end of times? One new world? Government Religion?
06:16 AM on 11/11/2010
I live in England, Northamptonshire to be more exact.

It is sad that Tony Blair feels the need to reach out to the world with concerns based on his faith when all over this county and country thousands of young people essentially are being raised by the street. Which only makes sense as their parents were raised by the state. Never before has this country seen such enmass antisocial behaviours - created by a generation of disengaged, diseducated and disenfranchised young people.

I think Tony Blair should come home and clean up his own back garden before he tries to globalize respect. Come home Tony, Northamptonshire needs you.

Carol Threadgold, Bozeat England
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
AtheistUS
10:35 PM on 11/10/2010
Blair had his chance to have a dialog about interfaith, education and globalization with Bush.
He could make a difference and oppose invasion to Iraq.
Now a prison would be a good place for him and his dialogs.
06:49 AM on 11/11/2010
fanned big time AtheistUS . . . totally agree
08:35 AM on 11/11/2010
F & F.
fredgladys
Your Micro-bio is empty, I know, stop nagging.
08:52 PM on 11/10/2010
I have difficulty in believing Tony Blairs dedication to anything but self interest. He held off converting to Catholicism because it may have hurt his chance to become PM. His lack of credibility has been displayed in so many ways on so many issues. It is difficult to understand why he is a spokesman for anything.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/7780980.stm
07:17 AM on 11/11/2010
In the making? One world Government Religion?
03:16 PM on 11/11/2010
I agree with his dedication to self interest. However, interfaith dialog is very important also.
07:20 AM on 11/16/2010
But how can a man that started an illegal war against a Muslim nation, ignoring the massive protests against it by his own electorate, who blindly supports Israel and was a poodle to the USA ever have ANY credibility when it comes to such dialogue?
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Dave24
Without God, life is everything.
06:16 PM on 11/10/2010
"Religion: bringing people together in a world torn apart, by religion."
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Chaotician101
05:32 PM on 11/10/2010
I fail to see the need for inter-faith dialogue. Isn't it better to have secular groupings and respect peoples "faiths" as a personal matter? Interfaith always sounds like someone is trying to proselytize and "prove" ones God is better than anothers God or at least ones approach to God is a better and more "authentic" than another! This is particularily an issue seeing as how Tony is a Evangelical variety Christian who as recall is charged with bringing Jesus to the poor unenlightened souls without Tony's Come to Jesus moment!
I don't really need to understand someones religion as long as I respect them and their choices; and this respect does not preclude my seeking understanding if I choose.
03:55 PM on 11/10/2010
Leave it to a convert to think "religious faith" will solve much of anything.

Perhapsd Tony could get the church of Rome he now embraces to stop molesting and raping children?

That should certainly build a bridge toward honesty and Justice in one fell swoop.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Just walkin the dog here
So, just where is this micro-bio? This it?
03:04 PM on 11/10/2010
How about, "Tony Blair, on why I was wrong to ignore facts and fully back George Bush."
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
AtheistUS
10:37 PM on 11/10/2010
That's first that we'd like to hear from this war criminal.
Anything else can wait.
09:19 AM on 11/11/2010
ditto
07:19 AM on 11/11/2010
Because one is no longer in power? I ask does not mean, they still are not in power, moving on their agenda, right?
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farmilyman
everything is illusion
02:54 PM on 11/10/2010
First have a dialog about sending young people to war under false pretenses.
researcher
researcher
02:17 PM on 11/10/2010
two people need to be brought up for war crimes.

bush and blair.

religion and the need for power is an interesting aspect of the human mind.

it is needed as it is supported by the masses.

did he think he would be a war president like bush jr and very popular?

does this man have any idea of the suffering he caused to the iraqi people?????????

here is just one reminder: http://pubrecord.org/world/5811/depleted-uranium-babies-afghanistan/

and it is not over yet a civil war will loom there within the next decade.

we still have 50,000 troops there and who knows how many illegal soldiers called mercenarys (sic).

hang in there americans another bush is coming to the white house and he wont be afraid to invade iran.

it is interesting but america is going down the same road as england and its former imperialism and becoming a third world nation like its latin neighbors.
01:49 PM on 11/10/2010
We can't have interfaith dialogue because it obliterates the separation of church and state, and, besides, religion is all myths and legends, and we need to teach our children facts, and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Singing Sparrow
retired-government worker
12:09 PM on 11/10/2010
This is ridiculous and pitiful. I always point to the fact that the once young governor of Arkansas is now worth millions and millions of dollars. The global corporations are behind his wealth and no doubt Blair's wealth, although I know nothing of Mr Blair's finances. It was the global corporations that could get Clinton and Bush to walk hand in hand as if the differences that they supposedly represented were mere nothings.
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Kimiko Austin-Rijs
American/European
10:41 AM on 11/10/2010
Globalisation has been a failure and so is Tony Blair and his ilk.