From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


War in Iraq underscores bigger 'clash,' speakers say


From "NewsDesk" <NewsDesk@UMCOM.ORG>
Date Thu, 10 Apr 2003 15:16:31 -0500

April 10, 2003	     News media contact: Joretta Purdue7(202)
546-87227Washington	10-21-71BPI{209}

NOTE: Photographs are available with this report.

By Joretta Purdue*

WASHINGTON (UMNS) - The current war against Iraq is not so much a clash of
cultures as conflict between the United States and the people of the rest of
the world, said former presidential candidate George McGovern.

The former South Dakota senator, 1972 Democratic presidential nominee and
history professor said the U.S.-led war is also in conflict with the United
Nations, not to mention the Sermon on the Mount and positions taken by U.S.
leaders throughout history.

McGovern was among the speakers during an April 4-5 event honoring the
servant leadership of United Methodist Bishop James K. and Eunice Mathews.
The celebration included a symposium focusing on the "Clash of Civilizations:
The Challenge to Our Institutions of Higher Learning." The United Methodist
Higher Education Foundation and the Kerr Foundation sponsored the event.

McGovern, a United Methodist, said he doesn't think the clash will stop when
Iraq surrenders. "I think other countries are on the list," he said, citing
comments by administration officials. Since McGovern spoke April 5, Secretary
of Defense Donald Rumsfeld has said that materials are continuing to enter
Iraq from Syria and asserted that they will be stopped.

At the symposium, McGovern, a Democrat, criticized President Bush, a
Republican and fellow United Methodist, for squandering the good will much of
the world previously felt toward the people of the United States. McGovern
remarked that the president has claimed to be "a uniter, not a divider," but
said Bush "has united the world against the United States."

Though the president makes references to feeling guided by God, McGovern said
that God "sent an entirely different message to the pope," the head of the
National Council of Churches of Christ in the USA, leading rabbis and others.
McGovern himself is a former Methodist supply pastor and the son of a
Wesleyan Methodist minister.

The toughest of Bush's "sideline warriors" have never been near a battle,
said McGovern, a decorated bomber pilot in World War II. The best thing Bush
could do is keep American troops out of an unjust war, he said. 

"I don't see the slightest evidence" of a link between Iraqi dictator Saddam
Hussein and the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, McGovern said.
Though Saddam Hussein and al-Qaida boss Osama bin Laden reportedly don't like
each other, the U.S. government has said evidence exists that Iraq has
provided training support to Islamic terrorist organizations. Al-Qaida is
believed responsible for the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

Besides McGovern's remarks, participants at the symposium heard a panel of
five college chaplains discuss how the conflict in the Middle East is
affecting the United Methodist schools they serve and the larger effort of
working in multicultural, multifaith settings.

College students' culture is one of anxiety, said Stewart Jackson of
Birmingham (Ala.)-Southern College. "Sept. 11 just heightened that." The
anxiety stems from "experiencing yourself under threat," he said, noting that
this is particularly true for international students. He also sees anxiety
among staff and faculty.

"If you continue to relate only to people like yourself, your anxiety only
will increase," he said. 

Relationships provide an antidote to anxiety, he said. For example, "service
learning" projects enable students to form relationships while experiencing
the world beyond Western thinking, he said. Such experience is important, he
said, because anxiety retards faith development, increases polarity between
people, and blocks imagination and critical thinking.

The Rev. Lynn Pries at North Central College, near Chicago, has led students
in service projects to other countries as well as to the impoverished
Appalachia region of the United States. A student described one such project
as "a spiritual growth program using hammers and saws."

The Rev. K. James Davis of the University of Puget Sound in Tacoma, Wash.,
spoke of the value of being in ministry on a college campus, working with
students of all faiths from a standpoint of one's own tradition. Last year,
the students held a day of remembrance service for the Sept. 11 attacks, and
each person read a prayer from a faith other than his or her own. 

Before the war in Iraq, students put together a contingency plan for the
outbreak of hostilities, Davis said. Vigils were held, affirming their
connectedness to all humanity, he said. Their prayers were for the Iraqi
people as well as U.S. soldiers and people in the United States. 

The Rev. Susan Henry-Crowe, dean of the chapel and religious life at
Atlanta's Emory University - at 12,000 students the largest of the campuses
represented on the panel - said the program she heads does not work for
common ground but for understanding and mutual respect among the 30 religious
groups on campus. Great diversity exists within those groups, she added.

She had 10 Jewish and Muslim student leaders to her house for dinner recently
and asked each to tell the stories of their grandparents, who were from all
over the world. They couldn't discuss the war, but they could talk about
their grandparents' lives, she explained.

The Rev. Don Fortenberry, chaplain at Millsaps College in Jackson, Miss., for
28 years, said students at his school are expressing their opposition to the
war on street corners for the first time since the civil rights movement. 

The two-day "Clash of Civilizations" event took its name from a book by
Samuel Huntington, a political scientist at Harvard, who theorizes that the
age of conflicts between nation-states is ending and the world has moved into
a time of conflict between cultures, civilizations and religions. 

The Rev. Shaun Casey, who teaches Christian ethics at Wesley Theological
Seminary in Washington, outlined Huntington's thesis, which includes a rebuke
to the people who think the world is moving toward unity. Huntington says the
balance of power is shifting; the West's influence is declining, while Islam
is exploding. 

Casey offered several lessons for seminaries and divinity schools to draw:
recover "public service as Christian vocation"; provide a safe place for
people, including politicians, to discuss honestly faith and values; train
clergy and teachers about the role of faith and public policy in a democracy;
and offer "inter-civilization" education.

"Muslims in America today feel surrounded and embattled," he observed.
Seminaries need to offer renewed study of Islam. "We need to know how to be
good neighbors."

He also advised theological schools to deal with war as a moral issue, noting
that the "just war" theory can help structure public debate; to expand the
interfaith dialogue; to come to grips with increasing pluralism of religions
in the United States; and to "eradicate global poverty."  He said the gap
between the fed and the unfed is growing.

Akbar Ahmed, chairman of Islamic studies at American University, said that
Jesus is important to Islam because he symbolizes compassion, humility and
peace. Ahmed spoke during a gathering of Christian scholars and education
supporters hosted by Betty Bumpers, wife of former Sen. Dale Bumpers of
Arkansas, as part of the two-day celebration.

A clash between West and East has been under way for the past thousand years,
Ahmed said, using the Crusades as an example of that ongoing conflict.

The Muslim world has its problems, the professor noted, citing a growing gap
between rich and poor, an often-corrupt ruling elite, widespread illiteracy
and denial of women's rights as guaranteed by Islam. The Muslim world also
feels its honor and dignity are at stake, he said.

Ahmed grew up in Pakistan and attended Catholic schools there. Fifty years
ago, relations between Islam and Christianity were good, he recalled.
"Churches are being attacked (now) because of the perception of Christianity
on a crusade against Islam," he noted. 

He urged his listeners to read about Islam; be actively involved in
interfaith dialogue, which he termed the "only thing that can stop Osama bin
Laden"; and speak up to say the conflict in Iraq is not a war against Islam. 

# # #

*Purdue is United Methodist News Service's Washington news director.

*************************************
United Methodist News Service
Photos and stories also available at:
http://umns.umc.org


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