In the dark days after 9/11, a M
By Tom Krattenmaker
Walt, of course, is talking about the humanitarian consequences of an Israeli blockade to prevent the re-arming of Hamas in the tense aftermath of last winter’s clash between the Israelis and Palestinians. But the fasting rabbi’s point could apply just as well to a larger trend that seems to be gaining steam.
To the frustration of conflict-mongers on both sides of the divide, open-minded Jews, Muslims and Christians are breaking clash-of-civilizations formation and extending hands of friendship toward those they’re supposed to hate. This pattern is far from complete, with war-of-the-worlds field officers fighting tenaciously to keep the troops in line. Nonetheless, one gets the sense that the tides have shifted and begun moving, inexorably, toward inter-religious understanding and a less religiously fractured world. On these counts at least, the fast-approaching new decade might look a lot different from this one.
Moving away from ‘clash’
The “clash of civilizations” theory dates to 1993, when Harvard professor Samuel Huntington published the famous essay that coined the term and described its ominous contours. In the absence of the ideological battle of the Cold War , Huntington argued, conflicts between “civilizations” would define the new age — civilizations defined by their cultures and, especially, their religions.
Coming out the same year as the first World Trade Center bombing , Huntington’s essay seemed to explain something real and menacing taking shape in the world. This decade’s battles appeared to put real flesh on his theory’s bones. But recent months have brought acts of the highest profile that would appear all but impossible in a world cleanly divided by deep fissures between civilizations.
There was the American president — a Christian with an African surname and Muslims in his ancestry — traveling to Cairo and declaring to his Muslim audience: “America is not — and never will be — at war with Islam.” There was Rick Warren , the leading figure in American evangelicalism, addressing the conference of the Muslim Public Affairs Council and proclaiming his love for Muslims (as well as Jews, Hindus and Buddhists) and his conviction that “al-Qaeda no more represents Islam than the Ku Klux Klan represents Christianity.”
And there is the popular uprising by the Iranian people against an explicitly Islamist regime that had declared America the “Great Satan” and defined its country’s identity as over and against all things Western. As foreign policy scholar Joshua Muravchik argued in an (Portland) Oregonian opinion piece in July, “Much as the hammers that leveled the Berlin Wall in 1989 marked the end of the Cold War, so might the protests rocking Iran signal the death of radical Islam and the challenge it poses to the West.”
In making sense of these and many similar stories, it’s important to resist getting carried away on a wave of We Are the World sentimentality. Threats remain, and hard-headed realism still is essential. Yet practical reality is also on the side of quelling conflict — unless you cling to the fantastical belief that Christianity must and will conquer Islam, or vice versa, and that such an outcome could somehow be achieved at a cost worth paying.
Those committing terrorism in the name of Islam provide some of the most glaring examples. As do laws in several Muslim countries that harshly forbid conversions from Islam to other religions, and chauvinist politicians like Iran’s Mahmoud Ahmadinejad who spew slurs against Jews and Israel. Here’s longing for the day when headlines don’t bring more tidings of Muslims attacking Christian minority populations, as happened in Pakistan in early August, and Islamist clerics twisting Quranic teachings into vendettas against any “infidel” who does not subscribe to their hateful strain of Islam.Fanning the flames
Tom Krattenmaker, a writer based in Portland, Ore., specializing in religion in public life, is a member of USA TODAY’S board of contributors. His book Onward Christian Athletes will be released in October.