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Rev. Charles Gibbs

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Media Fan the Flames of Religious Intolerance

Posted: 03/25/11 07:18 PM ET

When a Florida church announced last summer that it was planning an "International Burn A Quran Day" to commemorate the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the news spread rapidly through the Internet and was picked up by dozens of mainstream media outlets worldwide. Pastor Terry Jones's image and words were suddenly everywhere.

After public outcry and private pressure forced him to back down, Jones is at it again: He held a mock trial for the Islamic holy book and oversaw its burning on March 20, and he is now planning an anti-Islam protest at the Islamic Center of America in Dearborn, Mich., one of the nation's largest mosques, in April.

And yet again, the news media is chomping at the bit.

This is the kind of publicity that most organizations dream about. Public acts of intolerance like this are designed to make a splash, to both incite fear and rally followers to a cause. And the controversy they engender, the acrimony they spark, makes a salacious news story. But is this news? Or should it be?

Burning a Quran -- or any holy book -- is an offense not just to Islam but to our common humanity, and we can hardly turn a blind eye, but this kind of violence is not the story of our society; it is a sideshow. For every one act of hate in the world, there are hundreds, thousands, millions of acts of kindness.

All over the world, through interfaith organizations like the United Religions Initiative (URI), millions of people are overcoming religious divisions in some of the most divisive societies, working side-by-side to end religiously motivated conflict and build peace in their communities. A Better Community 4 All Pakistan, a URI Cooperation Circle, started a school in Lahore slum that teaches Christian and Muslim children side-by-side and instills in them values of respect and tolerance. Another URI member in Israel co-founded the country's first Arab-Jewish Waldorf Kindergarten with the same goal. And a URI group in Barcelona, Spain facilitated a funeral for a prominent Muslim in the local Catholic Church because there was no Muslim worship space large enough.

Every day, in ways large and small, ordinary people of all faiths, all cultures, all traditions are working to bridge differences and bring an end to the senseless violence that undermines lives and livelihoods.

Their stories rarely make headlines, yet they reflect who we are as a people so much more accurately than the voices of intolerance at our fringes. If we as a society can find a way to put the good news ahead of the bad, to give stories of hope and courage the kind of frenzied attention we now give stories of anger and despair, we will take the megaphone away from those who would sow division and hatred and allow the quieter chorus of peace and fairness to prevail.

 
 
 
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03:47 PM on 04/03/2011
Thanks Charles. It sure would be good to move beyond the bibliolatry that venerates "holy books" especially in the minds of the uneducated faithful who feel they have to defend, often violently, "God's Word." Yes, I would not advocate burning any books, but I would and do advocate placing the sacred texts in museums so we can get on with the work that needs to be done. A world divided by scripture is in need of a Berlin Wall moment, when the fences of faith crumble. By the way, I'm a non-theist, but you make more sense than 99% of what I see on these pages. Great work! (now let's get more freethinkers involved in URI--and maybe change the name to UHI: United Humans Initiative!).
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nenitaB
Not the talk. What good result would it hav
04:27 AM on 04/03/2011
I completely agree with Rev. C. Gibbs ' views. That's what make the news, unusual and controversial that attrack media and organizations . Honestly , this is the trend and the public caters to it. This quran burning is a cowardly ,abhorable ,act against Islam and humanity . It simply shows Jones being a Christian preacher makes him 'un- christian'. He has no right anymore to preach what is outside his knowledge within the context and beliefs on Christianity.Rev. Gibbs also calls for respect and fairness and not glamorizing the bad issue. like this.
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Barbara Graham
Comin at u from Area 5150
03:38 PM on 03/31/2011
One of the best quotes from last year...

DUDE, YOU HAVE NO KORAN!

Meanwhile, who remembers all the spittle spraying hate speech brayed from the pie-hole of that hater in Florida?

Dude, you HAVE no Koran!
11:15 PM on 03/28/2011
BURNING BIBLES WOULD NOT OFFEND ME AS A CHRISTIAN. WE WOULD JUST MAKE MORE AND THE BIBLE BEING THE SELLER ALWAYS HELPS. WOULD I AS CHRISTIAN BURN QURANS THE ANSWER IS NO. WHAT WOULD THE POINT BE. QURAN HAS NO MEANING FOR ME BUT IF IT GIVES COMFORT TO THEIR BELIEVERS. I DONT HAVE A PROBLEM WITH THAT.
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Jelle NL
Unity in Diversity
03:18 PM on 03/28/2011
“For every one act of hate in the world, there are hundreds, thousands, millions of acts of kindness”. Yes, but it so much easier to destroy than to build. (Mr. Jones was even on TV here in the Netherlands) I am on the verge of despair.

In stead of going to Dearborn, Mich. Mr. Jones should go to the "Bebelplatz" in the Centre of Berlin. There he can reflect on the good that resulted from the burning of books that happened there in May 1933. After that I recommend that he treats himself on an ice-cream on a bench of "Unter Den Linden" and experience how beautiful the small things of life can be.

“Dort, wo man Bücher verbrennt, verbrennt man am Ende auch Menschen" ("Where they burn books, they will in the end burn people too." (Heinrich Heine)
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ninetailedfox
banning people.....so childish
02:59 PM on 03/28/2011
Ill be honest with you, I believe very strongly Dick Cheney was responsible for 9/11. As for Islam, I dont know enough about the religion to make a fully informed decision. However, I do not like christianity because christians actively convert the masses, and I find it annoying.
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umbriago
The Tooth Shall Set My Fee
02:32 PM on 03/28/2011
Oddly enough, I hadn't been aware of the pastor's upcoming protests until I read this column.