PDA

View Full Version : US Engagement with Religion in Conflict-Prone Settings



Jedburgh
07-21-2007, 04:27 PM
CSIS, 20 Jul 07: Mixed Blessings: U.S. Government Engagement with Religion in Conflict-Prone Settings (http://www.csis.org/media/csis/pubs/070720_religion.pdf)

....Global religious dynamics increasingly influence U.S. involvement overseas. Faithbased groups in the United States have driven foreign policy in places such as Sudan and China, while religiously motivated transnational groups such as al Qaeda have threatened U.S. national security. International religious movements have also mobilized at unprecedented levels to do important development work overseas. For its part, the U.S. government has recently undertaken reconstruction efforts in societies where religion plays a critical role, notably in Iraq and Afghanistan.

In a world heavily influenced by religion, U.S. government intelligence, military, diplomatic, and development tools must be properly prepared to engage these religious elements. Although so-called religious conflicts are often driven by a number of other, underlying factors, religion is a strong source of identity that can be used to mobilize constituencies and called upon to justify extreme action....

marct
07-21-2007, 04:47 PM
Some interesting articles here, although people will need subscriber access to get them.


Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies: Volume 33 Issue 6 (http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=1369-183X&volume=33&issue=6&uno_jumptype=alert&uno_alerttype=new_issue_alert,email) is now available online at informaworld (http://www.informaworld.com (http://www.informaworld.com/)).
Special Issue: Governing Islam in Western Europe%3a Essays on Governance of Religious Diversity

This new issue contains the following articles:

The Governance of Islam in Europe: The Perils of Modelling p. 871
Authors: Veit Bader
DOI: 10.1080/13691830701432723
Link: http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=article&issn=1369-183X&volume=33&issue=6&spage=871&uno_jumptype=alert&uno_alerttype=new_issue_alert,email

Democracy and Religion: Theoretical and Empirical Observations on the Relationship between Christianity, Islam and Liberal Democracy p. 887
Authors: Michael Minkenberg
DOI: 10.1080/13691830701432731
Link: http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=article&issn=1369-183X&volume=33&issue=6&spage=887&uno_jumptype=alert&uno_alerttype=new_issue_alert,email

Europeanising the Governance of Religious Diversity: An Institutionalist Account of Muslim Struggles for Public Recognition p. 911
Authors: Matthias Koenig
DOI: 10.1080/13691830701432756
Link: http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=article&issn=1369-183X&volume=33&issue=6&spage=911&uno_jumptype=alert&uno_alerttype=new_issue_alert,email

Religious Institutions, Church–State History and Muslim Mobilisation in Britain, France and Germany p. 933
Authors: J. Christopher Soper; Joel S. Fetzer
DOI: 10.1080/13691830701432780
Link: http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=article&issn=1369-183X&volume=33&issue=6&spage=933&uno_jumptype=alert&uno_alerttype=new_issue_alert,email

The Political Accommodation of Immigrant Religious Practices: The Case of Special Admission Rules for Ministers of Religion p. 945
Authors: Albert Kraler
DOI: 10.1080/13691830701432822
Link: http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=article&issn=1369-183X&volume=33&issue=6&spage=945&uno_jumptype=alert&uno_alerttype=new_issue_alert,email

New Challenges for Islamic Ritual Slaughter: A European Perspective p. 965
Authors: Florence Bergeaud-Blackler
DOI: 10.1080/13691830701432871
Link: http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=article&issn=1369-183X&volume=33&issue=6&spage=965&uno_jumptype=alert&uno_alerttype=new_issue_alert,email

Islamic Presence and Mosque Establishment in France: Colonialism, Arrangements for Guestworkers and Citizenship p. 981
Authors: Marcel Maussen
DOI: 10.1080/13691830701432889
Link: http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=article&issn=1369-183X&volume=33&issue=6&spage=981&uno_jumptype=alert&uno_alerttype=new_issue_alert,email

A View from France on the Internal Complexity of National Models p. 1003
Authors: John Bowen
DOI: 10.1080/13691830701432905
Link: http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=article&issn=1369-183X&volume=33&issue=6&spage=1003&uno_jumptype=alert&uno_alerttype=new_issue_alert,email

Reviews p. 1017
DOI: 10.1080/13691830701432913
Link: http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=article&issn=1369-183X&volume=33&issue=6&spage=1017&uno_jumptype=alert&uno_alerttype=new_issue_alert,email

skiguy
07-21-2007, 07:36 PM
Thanks for this. I'll have to read this in its entirety seeing that it's a huge interest of mine and something I hope to be involved in the near future.


American interests will be better met through increased awareness and recognition of how religion affects international affairs...

Jedburgh
02-06-2008, 04:27 PM
USIP, 5 Feb 08: Religion in World Affairs: Its Role in Conflict and Peace (http://www.usip.org/pubs/specialreports/sr201.pdf)

Summary

• No major religion has been exempt from complicity in violent conflict. Yet we need to beware of an almost universal propensity to oversimplify the role that religion plays in international affairs. Religion is not usually the sole or even primary cause of conflict.

• With so much emphasis on religion as a source of conflict, the role of religion as a force in peacemaking is usually overlooked.

• Religious affiliation and conviction often motivates religious communities to advocate particular peace-related government policies. Religious communities also directly oppose repression and promote peace and reconciliation.

• Religious leaders and institutions can mediate in conflict situations, serve as a communication link between opposing sides, and provide training in peacemaking methodologies. This form of religious peacemaking garners less public attention but is growing in importance.

• Interfaith dialogue is another form of religious peacemaking. Rather than seeking to resolve a particular conflict, it aims to defuse interfaith tensions that may cause future conflict or derive from previous conflict. Interfaith dialogue is expanding even in places where interreligious tensions are highest. Not infrequently, the most contentious interfaith relationships can provide the context for the most meaningful and productive exchanges.

• Given religion’s importance as both a source of international conflict and a resource for peacemaking, it is regrettable that the U.S. government is so ill equipped to handle religious issues and relate to religious actors. If the U.S. government is to insert itself into international conflicts or build deeper and more productive relationships with countries around the world, it needs to devise a better strategy to effectively and respectfully engage with the religious realm.
Complete 8 page paper at the link.

Jedburgh
10-10-2008, 03:19 AM
USIP, 8 Oct 08: Abrahamic Alternatives to War: Jewish, Christian, and Muslim Perspectives on Just Peacemaking (http://www.usip.org/pubs/specialreports/sr214.pdf)

Summary

• Jewish, Muslim, and Christian sacred texts all contain sections that support violence and justify warfare as a means to achieve certain goals. In particular historical circumstances, these texts have served as the basis to legitimate violent campaigns, oftentimes against other faith communities.

• Many of the passages from sacred texts in all three religious traditions that are misused in contemporary situations to support violence and war are taken out of context, interpreted in historically inaccurate ways, or can be better translated. Finally, all of these passages need to be understood within (and constrained by) the primary spiritual aims of the individual faith.

• There are also a great many teachings and ethical imperatives within Jewish, Christian, and Muslim scriptures that promote peace and present the means to achieve it. These include mandates to strive for political, social, and economic justice; tolerant intercommunal coexistence; and nonviolent conflict resolution.

• The three religious delegations that participated in the conference leading to this report presented slightly different and yet overlapping methods for peacemaking articulated by their sacred scriptures. The considerable overlap led the scholars to affirm the existence of a coherent “Abrahamic Just Peacemaking” paradigm, which began to take focus through their rigorous interfaith debate.

• Further work is needed to articulate fully this Abrahamic Just Peacemaking paradigm. The conference scholars committed themselves to continued development of this model in pursuit of a rigorous and effective faith-based program to promote alternatives to war.

Jedburgh
01-22-2009, 09:30 PM
USIP, 21 Jan 09: Islamic Peacemaking Since 9/11 (http://www.usip.org/pubs/specialreports/sr218.pdf)

Summary
Muslims in general and Muslim leaders particularly have often been severely criticized for not more energetically condemning the violent acts of Muslim extremists.
Violent extremists are on one edge of the Muslim community. They are counter-balanced by a growing movement of Muslim peacemakers.
Equally as notable as Islamic militancy but less noted are Muslims’ 1) widespread condemnation of terrorism and other violent acts; 2) promotion of interfaith dialogue; 3) education of Muslim youth and reeducation of extremist Muslims; and 4) promotion of peaceful conflict resolution.

Rex Brynen
01-26-2009, 01:10 PM
Haaretz - 13:17 26/01/2009

IDF rabbinate publication during Gaza war: We will show no mercy on the crue (http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1058758.html)l

By Amos Harel, Haaretz Correspondent


An overview of some of the army rabbinate's publications made available during the fighting reflects the tone of nationalist propaganda that steps blatantly into politics, sounds racist and can be interpreted as a call to challenge international law when it comes to dealing with enemy civilians.

Haaretz has received some of the publications through Breaking the Silence, a group of former soldiers who collect evidence of unacceptable behavior in the army vis-a-vis Palestinians. Other material was provided by officers and men who received it during Operation Cast Lead. Following are quotations from this material:

"[There is] a biblical ban on surrendering a single millimeter of it [the Land of Israel] to gentiles, though all sorts of impure distortions and foolishness of autonomy, enclaves and other national weaknesses. We will not abandon it to the hands of another nation, not a finger, not a nail of it." This is an excerpt from a publication entitled "Daily Torah studies for the soldier and the commander in Operation Cast Lead," issued by the IDF rabbinate. The text is from "Books of Rabbi Shlomo Aviner," who heads the Ateret Cohanim yeshiva in the Muslim quarter of the Old City in Jerusalem.

The following questions are posed in one publication: "Is it possible to compare today's Palestinians to the Philistines of the past? And if so, is it possible to apply lessons today from the military tactics of Samson and David?" Rabbi Aviner is again quoted as saying: "A comparison is possible because the Philistines of the past were not natives and had invaded from a foreign land ... They invaded the Land of Israel, a land that did not belong to them and claimed political ownership over our country ... Today the problem is the same. The Palestinians claim they deserve a state here, when in reality there was never a Palestinian or Arab state within the borders of our country. Moreover, most of them are new and came here close to the time of the War of Independence."

The IDF rabbinate, also quoting Rabbi Aviner, describes the appropriate code of conduct in the field: "When you show mercy to a cruel enemy, you are being cruel to pure and honest soldiers. This is terribly immoral. These are not games at the amusement park where sportsmanship teaches one to make concessions. This is a war on murderers. 'A la guerre comme a la guerre.'"

Needless to say, I'm sure Hamas didn't have any issues mixing religion and politics. :D

Bob's World
01-26-2009, 01:52 PM
"Muslims in general and Muslim leaders particularly have often been severely criticized for not more energetically condemning the violent acts of Muslim extremists."

You see statements like this fairly often. Maybe it’s a fair criticism, but if one compares the current turmoil in the world it is VERY similar to the turmoil that rocked through Europe in the 1500s and 1600s.

Then: The printing press sparked an information age that led to Christian Reformation, the Renaissance, and the Age of Discovery; ultimately resulting in the overthrow of the Holy Roman Empire and the emergence of the Westphalian State system. Christian populaces of northern Europe, long suppressed from achieving self-determination by Rome (through the Catholic Church) see opportunity in change to rebel. Radical Christians (known then and now as “Protestants”) used an extreme brand of Christianity to break from the Catholic Church and end Rome’s rule over northern Europe.

Now: The invention of electronic information, accelerated in recent years by the internet and cell phones sparks a new surge of science, art, exploration and political turmoil. Muslim populaces of the Middle East, long suppressed from achieving self-determination by the West (through the U.S) see opportunity in change to rebel. Radical Muslims (known now as “violent extremists”, future will judge what they will be called 400 years from now) use an extreme brand of Islam to break from U.S. Control and end the West’s rule over the Middle East.

I’m sure the good people of Rome felt betrayed as well; but I do not think that “more energetically condemning the violent acts of Christian extremists” by the Pope and his Cardinals would have accomplished much…


Bottom line is that this is about Politics, not Religion. Every insurgency must have some ideology to effectively engage the target populace, and few messages are as powerful as those wrapped in that populace's religion in a way that also attacks their frustrations.

We must compete a more successful message (not attack their message) to win this competition with Muslim extremists, and we must also modify our behavior in the Middle East. This must be a two-way street or we'll never get there.

William F. Owen
01-26-2009, 01:53 PM
Needless to say, I'm sure Hamas didn't have any issues mixing religion and politics. :D

Ain't that the truth. To be fair the IDF has long tradition of ignoring the Rabbinate.

When the first Rabbi to reach the Wall suggesting blowing up the Dome of the Rock, he was told to get stuffed by the commander on the scene at the time, and the conversation is noted in the IDF official history.

The reason that Ha aretz has picked it up, is because it's basically out of step with a large percentage of Israeli society.

William F. Owen
01-26-2009, 02:11 PM
Bottom line is that this is about Politics, not Religion.

With respect Bob, there is no difference, for a great many people, here in the Middle East.


We must compete a more successful message (not attack their message) to win this competition with Muslim extremists, and we must also modify our behavior in the Middle East. This must be a two-way street or we'll never get there.

Again, and with respect, this is not about being reasonable or even rational. Who the message comes from, defines it. There is simply no such thing as a "better message."

The only pro-US message that will stick is one that comes from the extremists, themselves, and guards their credibility within their own communities - and to make them do that they will have to be very scared of you indeed.

marct
01-26-2009, 02:26 PM
Hi Bob,

A very nice analogy and one that has some validity I suspect.


I’m sure the good people of Rome felt betrayed as well; but I do not think that “more energetically condemning the violent acts of Christian extremists” by the Pope and his Cardinals would have accomplished much…

Let me note that Luther condemned a number of the "violent acts of Christian extremists".


Bottom line is that this is about Politics, not Religion. Every insurgency must have some ideology to effectively engage the target populace, and few messages are as powerful as those wrapped in that populace's religion in a way that also attacks their frustrations.

I certainly agree that religious symbology can be extremely powerful as the basis for an ideology. I'm not sure, however, that there can be any meaningful absolute distinction between "politics" and "religion", although it certainly is possible to distinguish between "religion" and a political process.


We must compete a more successful message (not attack their message) to win this competition with Muslim extremists, and we must also modify our behavior in the Middle East. This must be a two-way street or we'll never get there.

I'm afraid I have to agree with Wilf on this one. To my mind, the difficulty, to use marketing terms, is that you have no idea what you are "selling" and if there is any demand for "it", whatever "it" may be. It is all part of the degradation of public diplomacy in the US that has gone on for the last couple of decades (hey, Matt, chime in on this one buddy :D!).

Bob's World
01-26-2009, 03:21 PM
If we back off from current rhetoric tied to specific current U.S. values, and instead fall back to promoting (and then enabling) the sound populace -empowering principles upon which the U.S. was founded, I suspect we would have a far more favorable impact.

Self Determination is far more powerful of a concept than "Democracy" is. "All men are created equal" is far more powerful than a judgemental assessment that only current U.S. values on the roles and rights of minorities and women is correct. We had to evolve and grow into our principles; we need to allow the same opportunity for others.

The problem is that we just can't relinquish control. You can't promote democracy as the end all solution to good governance on one hand; and then refuse to recognize the officials that a populace elects simply becuase they hold positions counter to our own. The hipocrisy of such actions harms our national credibility tremendously.

We must provide a good example, and we must help enable popular sovereignty and self determination. Once we seek to lead more than control, our credibility stock will begin to rise once again.

marct
01-26-2009, 03:35 PM
Hi Bob,


If we back off from current rhetoric tied to specific current U.S. values, and instead fall back to promoting (and then enabling) the sound populace -empowering principles upon which the U.S. was founded, I suspect we would have a far more favorable impact.

Well, as a descendant of United Empire Loyalists, I'm not sure I would agree with those being founding values :eek:;).

But, yes, that would be a crucial step to delineating exactly what is being "sold". Part of the current problem has been to tie the foundational principles in with both current political rhetoric and issues of national interest. This has led to a situation where it is tricky for people outside of the US to figure out what you are pushing for (even in Canada!).


The problem is that we just can't relinquish control. You can't promote democracy as the end all solution to good governance on one hand; and then refuse to recognize the officials that a populace elects simply becuase they hold positions counter to our own. The hipocrisy of such actions harms our national credibility tremendously.

Yup - 'tis a real problem especially given the perception that historically, the US has gone with national interest over principle (I'm thinking of the propaganda coming out of Nicaragua and the early phase of Vietnam). If we look at the two current wars, the stance towards Iraq seems to be less hypocritical now, certainly when compared with the recent problems in Afghanistan.

Personally, I think part of the problem is a confusion of form and function. For example, I personally suspect that Afghanistan would be a lot more stable today if the monarchy had been restored, but we will never know...


We must provide a good example, and we must help enable popular sovereignty and self determination. Once we seek to lead more than control, our credibility stock will begin to rise once again.

Totally agree with that :D.

William F. Owen
01-26-2009, 03:42 PM
The problem is that we just can't relinquish control. You can't promote democracy as the end all solution to good governance on one hand; and then refuse to recognize the officials that a populace elects simply becuase they hold positions counter to our own. The hipocrisy of such actions harms our national credibility tremendously.


YES you can! Stupid is as Stupid does. The US has a constitution that puts checks and balances on self-determination, and the "power of the people."

The Holocaust was all legal and written into law, by a party that gained power in an election. If that was done by any government today, it would be clearly unacceptable.

The problem with promoting democracy as it is currently done, is that it is done really badly, and in a way bereft of a plan or a strategy.

marct
01-26-2009, 03:48 PM
The Holocaust was all legal and written into law, by a party that gained power in an election. If that was done by any government today, it would be clearly unacceptable.

Such as the Sudan :rolleyes:?

Actually, Wilf, I tend to agree, but it comes back to a question not really made by Fuch, but implied - quis custodiet ipsos custodes (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quis_custodiet_ipsos_custodes%3F)?


The problem with promoting democracy as it is currently done, is that it is done really badly, and in a way bereft of a plan or a strategy.

Or thought, or consideration of probable events, or.....

Part of that is because "Democracy" is assumed to be a golden BB; it isn't and never has been, but it is that symbolic talisman that will "make everything better" (with an implied "NOW, dagnabit!").

marct
01-26-2009, 03:52 PM
I'm reading a really great article by Scott Atran Jeremy Ginges right now called How Words Could End a War (http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/25/opinion/25atran.html?_r=1) (NY Times, January 24, 2009) that is actually on point for this thread.


For there is a moral logic to seemingly intractable religious and cultural disputes. These conflicts cannot be reduced to secular calculations of interest but must be dealt with on their own terms, a logic very different from the marketplace or realpolitik.

Rex Brynen
01-26-2009, 04:05 PM
I'm reading a really great article by Scott Atran Jeremy Ginges right now called How Words Could End a War (http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/25/opinion/25atran.html?_r=1) (NY Times, January 24, 2009) that is actually on point for this thread.

It is a great op ed.

The experimental research that it is based on can be found here (http://sitemaker.umich.edu/jginges/files/ginges_etal_2007.pdf). Although the piece is entitled "Sacred bounds on rational resolution of violent political conflict," it is not really about religion per se, but rather deeply-held normative views and perceptions of rights and injustices.

I always start my lectures on peace negotiations in civil wars with a classroom exercise based on the ultimatum game (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultimatum_game), which nicely makes the same point about the importance of normative issues in bargaining.

That being said, I know that at Taba in January 2001 the Palestinian and Israeli teams tried to put normative issues front and center in their initial discussions of the Palestinian refugee issue (one of the issues that the Atran and Ginges work examines). They found it so difficult to agree on a common narrative, however, so they set it aside to focus instead on technical and material issues where it was easier to discuss and reach agreement. :rolleyes:

wm
01-26-2009, 04:11 PM
"
We must compete a more successful message (not attack their message) to win this competition with Muslim extremists, and we must also modify our behavior in the Middle East. This must be a two-way street or we'll never get there.

I suspect it will take more than just competing a more successful message, particularly if we accept the value of BW's analogy based on his view of the Reformation's effect on the reigning Roman Catholic political status quo.

The response of Roman Catholicism in the Counter-Reformation was to turn away from the philosophical underpinnings of its world view and message--Neo-Platonism as modified by Augustine. A different world view, based on Aristotle, as seen through the lens of Thomas Aquinas, became central to the work of the reforming monks who sought to win the world back for Rome. The religious message remained the same; what changed was the metaphysical and epistemic foundation on which the message stood.

Interestingly, a slightly different process took place in England. The Anglican Church outdid Rome at its understanding of Aristotle and won the day by focussing on the pragmatic aspects of his work, particularly the naive empirical epistemology. This more practical application to the everyday person won over the English people more effectively than the casuistry found in Thomism.

(But this is all just my opinion as a former academic with some little hands on time as a practical person too.)

William F. Owen
01-26-2009, 05:33 PM
I'm reading a really great article by Scott Atran Jeremy Ginges right now called How Words Could End a War (http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/25/opinion/25atran.html?_r=1) (NY Times, January 24, 2009) that is actually on point for this thread.

Sorry, but I don't see this as that insightful, or even that hopeful. It's Israeli/Arab culture 101. The bizarre and patronising western attitude that the "Laws of Souk" apply to negotiating your peoples future, is well known and has always been useless. Look at the failure of the British and French peace and partition plans in 1929 and 1948.

As Rex says

They found it so difficult to agree on a common narrative, however, so they set it aside to focus instead on technical and material issues where it was easier to discuss and reach agreement.

Bob's World
01-26-2009, 05:40 PM
I suspect it will take more than just competing a more successful message, particularly if we accept the value of BW's analogy based on his view of the Reformation's effect on the reigning Roman Catholic political status quo.

The response of Roman Catholicism in the Counter-Reformation was to turn away from the philosophical underpinnings of its world view and message--Neo-Platonism as modified by Augustine. A different world view, based on Aristotle, as seen through the lens of Thomas Aquinas, became central to the work of the reforming monks who sought to win the world back for Rome. The religious message remained the same; what changed was the metaphysical and epistemic foundation on which the message stood.

Interestingly, a slightly different process took place in England. The Anglican Church outdid Rome at its understanding of Aristotle and won the day by focussing on the pragmatic aspects of his work, particularly the naive empirical epistemology. This more practical application to the everyday person won over the English people more effectively than the casuistry found in Thomism.

(But this is all just my opinion as a former academic with some little hands on time as a practical person too.)


:) Would love to pick your brain on this some day.

I really do believe, that we are sooo focused on the impact of the GWOT on us, that we fail to really appreciate everything that is going on for everyone else involved.

While there is not (currently) any major Islamic reform movement going on such as led by Luther; today's information age has to be breaking down the monopoly on information and knowledge of the Mullahs just as it did to the Catholic church leadership back then. Right now we are very focused on the outward manifestations of Muslim frustration; I suspect there will be a great deal of inward turmoil as well as those promoting reformation begin to bump more often and vigourously against those who wish to just keep things the way they are (or back to some vision of a perfection that used to be).

This is going to get more complex before it gets easier...

marct
01-26-2009, 05:44 PM
Hi Wilf,


Sorry, but I don't see this as that insightful, or even that hopeful. It's Israeli/Arab culture 101.

I don't think I characterized it as either "insightful" or hopeful" :wry:. And, yes I agree, it is a 101 class. What I was hoping to find, and it doesn't really show up in the main article Rex linked to unfortunately, was if they had expanded it significantly beyond the Israeli-Palestinian group. Anyway, I've emailed Scott to see if they have done any more elaboration on it.


The bizarre and patronising western attitude that the "Laws of Souk" apply to negotiating your peoples future, is well known and has always been useless. Look at the failure of the British and French peace and partition plans in 1929 and 1948.

Really good points, as is Rex's on not being able to come up with an agreeable narrative.

As an historical note, there are some interesting examples of this type of negotiation apparent in the Treaty of Westphalia (which is where I was hoping they had taken it) and other treaties (e.g. Quebec, 1760).

Ken White
01-26-2009, 06:17 PM
LINK (http://www.nationalpost.com/news/canada/story.html?id=1208144)

Not to point fingers at Canada, just to interject that religion, politics and community intertwine -- and that in my observation, community outweighs both the other considerations as a lever to force action; the other two are often used overtly to justify the action which is covertly about advancing the community (or the dedicated and bitter part of it...).

Sometimes these things linger for a GREAT many years, so quick solutions are rarely going to succeed. It would seem to make more sense to me to stop trying to change behavior -- which is egocentric, foolish and rarely really succeeds -- and adapt to reality...

marct
01-26-2009, 06:22 PM
Not to point fingers at Canada,

Oi vey! I wonder what twit came up with that! Thanks for the link, Ken, I hadn't seen it before.


just to interject that religion, politics and community intertwine -- and that in my observation, community outweighs both the other considerations as a lever to force action; the other two are often used overtly to justify the action which is covertly about advancing the community (or the dedicated and bitter part of it...).

Or some kinship group inside the community :wry:. No, I totally agree that that is very often the case.

jmm99
01-26-2009, 08:49 PM
Ste.-Foy (and the Windmill) 2010 - so that Marc and I can go to St.-Augustin, have a beer and toast our ancestors - But also,

Of the two battles, Ste.-Foy was more important to the future of modern Canada because it created something of a balance between the Brits and the Frogs. Both could and can say - "we won that one".

Which brings me to the point that the Brit occupation and "pacification" of Canada is a case study in avoiding an insurgency - and, in fact, bringing potential insurgents into the counter-insurgency camp. What the Brits did and did not do to accomplish that - in the face of divergent political and religious institutions - is worth some consideration.

I think that they did it right - not perfectly, but right. Marc can expound on this (we have in an older thread) from a Brit viewpoint - after all, you guys "won". But, as it developed, we can say "Colonialement" to our Scots adversaries. In Ken's terms, the two communities found it better to set aside their political and religious differences.

I (like the Société généalogique canadienne-française (SGCF) in its Projet Montcalm (http://www.sgcf.com/comm-montcalm-2007-11.php)) clearly have a different view of these battles than Mr. Wooten.


En effet, sur ce lieu se sont déroulés, il y a tout près de 250 ans, deux affrontements importants de la guerre de Sept Ans, soit la bataille des plaines d’Abraham, le 13 septembre 1759, opposant l’armée française - dirigée par le marquis de Montcalm – et l’armée britannique – menée par le général James Wolfe ainsi que la bataille de Sainte-Foy, le 28 avril 1760, opposant les deux mêmes armées, cette fois dirigées par le chevalier de Lévis et le général James Murray.
....
C’est pourquoi, elle entend organiser, le dimanche 13 septembre 2009, sur les plaines d’Abraham, un rassemblement des descendants patronymiques des militaires qui composaient alors les armées française et britannique ainsi que des descendants des miliciens et amérindiens ayant combattu, en alliés, aux côtés de ces armées.

marct
01-26-2009, 08:58 PM
Ste.-Foy (and the Windmill) 2010 - so that Marc and I can go to St.-Augustin, have a beer and toast our ancestors - But also,

Of the two battles, Ste.-Foy was more important to the future of modern Canada because it created something of a balance between the Brits and the Frogs. Both could and can say - "we won that one".

Definitely important :cool:. One of the students I'm supervising had an ancestor at the Windmill and one of my ancestors was there as well. We were out after class one night hoisting a few with some other students, and the look of incredulity when we both started talking about it on the face of one student from the Middle East was really hilarious :wry:. He just couldn't understand why we were drinking and joking together.


Which brings me to the point that the Brit occupation and "pacification" of Canada is a case study in avoiding an insurgency - and, in fact, bringing potential insurgents into the counter-insurgency camp. What the Brits did and did not do to accomplish that - in the face of divergent political and religious institutions - is worth some consideration.

Agreed. That "pacification", and I'm STILL wondering who just who got "pacified", laid the basis for one of the core components of Canadian culture that is still a focal point today. What always amazed me about it was that the Catholics (and Catholic Church) in Quebec had exactly the same rights as everyone else - a situation unique in the British Imperium at the time.


I think that they did it right - not perfectly, but right. Marc can expound on this (we have in an older thread) from a Brit viewpoint - after all, you guys "won". But, as it developed, we can say "Colonialement" to our Scots adversaries. In Ken's terms, the two communities found it better to set aside their political and religious differences.

We could just link through to it, rather than rewriting it :D. Yeah, I think we did a lot pretty well. And, when you get right down to it, the gender imbalance didn't hurt either :cool:.

Ken White
01-26-2009, 09:32 PM
...Which brings me to the point that the Brit occupation and "pacification" of Canada is a case study in avoiding an insurgency - and, in fact, bringing potential insurgents into the counter-insurgency camp. What the Brits did and did not do to accomplish that - in the face of divergent political and religious institutions - is worth some consideration.I'm not sure I agree with that. It was admittedly an excellent -- and quite innovative for the period -- short term solution. Long term? As Chou En Lai said of the French Revolution "It is too soon to tell." :confused:

Recall also that the nominal British rule of Canada began in 1763 and the initial rules directed at the French were sort of restrictive -- it was not until 1774 that Simcoe and others got a turn around to begin "...bringing potential insurgents into the counter-insurgency camp." Still, it was quickly effective and seemed right at the time...

None of that rejects your excellent point that it merits study. That is quite correct, I think.
...as it developed, we can say "Colonialement" to our Scots adversaries.Speaking of communities with long memories. ;)
In Ken's terms, the two communities found it better to set aside their political and religious differences.My terms would add "for the time being" in a disapproving tone. I'm strongly opposed to bandaid solutions and am a devotee of the "get 'er done" school of social work. "You can pay now or pay later" has a lot of merit as cliches go and I've sadly noted that most of the world would rather pay later -- when it's always more expensive, usually much more so. :(

Much better, almost always, to do it right the first time. Even if it hurts a bit.

jmm99
01-26-2009, 09:57 PM
again leaving the detail work to the CFM-Canada staff - eh !


We could just link through to it, rather than rewriting it

The thread is here (http://council.smallwarsjournal.com/showthread.php?t=4991), with the relevant posts being posts ## 6 & 7 & 13-15.

Given my very mixed paternal ancestry, there must have been "gender imbalance" in a number of places. :)

Ken - various of your points are covered in the links in the posts linked. I think they may address some points made by you. I think 1760 started on the right path, which was walked in the next 15 years by Guy Carleton and others. The bringing of the "insurgents" into the counter-insurgent camp was not completed until the War of 1812. After that, there was a time of peace - which allowed some "adjustments" - the limits of which were determined in 1837 (here (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rebellions_of_1837), here (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upper_Canada_Rebellion) & here (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lower_Canada_Rebellion)).

Yup, the story is far from ended - but Canada could not have developed as it has via a quick fix solution (IMO).

Ken White
01-26-2009, 10:34 PM
Yup, the story is far from endedThis is very much true...
...but Canada could not have developed as it has via a quick fix solution (IMO).I agree that Canada would have developed differently without the elected solution.

However, I must have a bad communication problem. I was opposing a quick fix as I oppose most all of them, they rarely work. IMO the occurrences in Canada of which we speak from 1760-1812 amounted to, in the grand scheme of things, a quick fix that haunts Canada -- and Quebec today. Thus my Chou En Lai quote. I thought I made it clear that I was strongly opposed to quick fixes and suggested that the British solution in Canada amounted to that IMO.

As we both agree the story is far from over. Pay now or pay later...

jmm99
01-27-2009, 06:18 AM
is at this end of the line. I do not deal well with pithy aphorisms - and probably should not use them. As a listener, I tend to interpret them in my terms (which may or may not be what the pithy guy meant). As a babbler, I tend to think the listener will interpret them in my terms. Yes, I know - "ass u me".

I do better with concrete examples - which reduce the aphorism to practice.

Here are a couple of your quotes, with mine in between:


KW: I'm strongly opposed to bandaid solutions and am a devotee of the "get 'er done" school of social work.
....
JMM: Yup, the story is far from ended - but Canada could not have developed as it has via a quick fix solution (IMO).
....
KW: I was opposing a quick fix as I oppose most all of them, they rarely work.

To me, a "bandaid solution" is an inadequate solution motivated by a desire to do it on the cheap. Roughly what you mean ?

To me, "get 'er done" means pour on the coals, use all available assets, do it in a relatively short time (1 yr, 5 yrs, 10 yrs, in this context). So, to me that equates to a quick fix, which could be a bandaid or artificial life support, looking more at the timeframe than the extent of the treatment.

I understand the following,


IMO the occurrences in Canada of which we speak from 1760-1812 amounted to, in the grand scheme of things, a quick fix that haunts Canada -- and Quebec today.

but would not be likely to say it because 50+ years, to me, is not a quick fix.

I view Canada of the last 250 years (and for the first 50 years) as an evolutionary process (2 steps forward, one step back - as summed here (http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/war/quebec.htm)), which seems to be heading in a positive direction (http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601082&sid=aLcqyDb2_Auk&refer=canada) (IMO). The views held by such as Marc and Rex would give a better pulse reading for the patient.

As to Chou:


As Chou En Lai said of the French Revolution "It is too soon to tell."

I'd ask him, "about what". As to Louis XVI, not too soon. As to his Bourbon relatives recreating the monarchy, too soon to tell since that is "possible" so long as one is alive. As to the evolutions of "liberty, equality and fraternity", always too soon to tell until there are no thinking beings to argue about those principles.

To paraphrase - the Internet is an imperfect means of communication.

If you are ever so inclined, you can send me a PM outlining your counterfactual history of what should have done to avoid "a quick fix that haunts Canada -- and Quebec today." Seriously, I'd be interested.

Frankly, my only reason for discussing Canada in this thread is that it is an example, to me, of just how difficult and time consuming "nation building" is - in the context of divergent ethnic, religious and political institutions.

Ken White
01-27-2009, 05:44 PM
are twins...:o


To me, a "bandaid solution" is an inadequate solution motivated by a desire to do it on the cheap. Roughly what you mean ?Close. I view it as a solution usually but not always seen as cheaper but most importantly, seen as doing something that will rapidly make the problem go away -- speed generally is more important than cost. It is in fact a technique often used by legislators in an attempt to forward a greater cost to someone else or a later politician to pay.
To me, "get 'er done" means pour on the coals, use all available assets, do it in a relatively short time (1 yr, 5 yrs, 10 yrs, in this context). So, to me that equates to a quick fix, which could be a bandaid or artificial life support, looking more at the timeframe than the extent of the treatment.A perfectly valid assumption and my fault for a bad choice of words. I meant do it right the first time even if it costs and hurts more in the short term and that's what I should've said.
I understand the following,

"IMO the occurrences in Canada of which we speak from 1760-1812 amounted to, in the grand scheme of things, a quick fix that haunts Canada -- and Quebec today."

but would not be likely to say it because 50+ years, to me, is not a quick fix.

I view Canada of the last 250 years (and for the first 50 years) as an evolutionary process (2 steps forward, one step back...I agree on the 250 years as an evolutionary process and disagree on the fifty years being quick. Fifty years is a drop in the historical bucket IMO. I understand many will not agree but I tend to agree with Mr. Chou and the period 1760-1812 is less than a microdot from the history of Canada the land and only about one ninth of that of Canada the nation.
The views held by such as Marc and Rex would give a better pulse reading for the patient.They are Canadian, their views have validity about Canada. You partly are of French-Canadian descent and have read far more Canadian history than have I. Your views on Canada are more formed than mine and of greater relevance. I have no Canadian ties other than repect for them as a great nation that has done a lot of good things (and that trains their Troops better than we can manage...) However, none of the three of you can or are trying to define my way of viewing history; we can do that differently with no problems -- other than miscommunication -- I should think. ;)
As to Chou:...I'd ask him, "about what". As to Louis XVI, not too soon. As to his Bourbon relatives recreating the monarchy, too soon to tell since that is "possible" so long as one is alive. As to the evolutions of "liberty, equality and fraternity", always too soon to tell until there are no thinking beings to argue about those principles.Good for you, get him to clarify. I, OTOH, am comfortable that France has changed, is changing -- and will change more and that such future changes will impact others in ways we cannot know. I don't have a problem with that.
To paraphrase - the Internet is an imperfect means of communication.What did Marc say the other day -- 400% chance of garble... :D
If you are ever so inclined, you can send me a PM outlining your counterfactual history of what should have done to avoid "a quick fix that haunts Canada -- and Quebec today." Seriously, I'd be interested.No objection to a PM but no need either, can do it here briefly: Multiculturalism is a great ideal. In practice it tends to fragment nations. To pursue it or not is the decision of each nation. I have no basis for objecting or approving, it is none of my business and I have no real right to interject my personal opinion (not that anyone would much care if I did) but I can objectively say the practice sows dissension that will create long term problems for a nation and Canada is but one example. France is another. As is the US. That is not an advocacy to change any of those three, just noting that all have problems in that vein -- many due to their Politicians looking at quick fixes... :wry:
Frankly, my only reason for discussing Canada in this thread is that it is an example, to me, of just how difficult and time consuming "nation building" is - in the context of divergent ethnic, religious and political institutions.On that we can totally agree...

jmm99
01-27-2009, 07:30 PM
and Miss Congeniality (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miss_Congeniality_(film)) certainly communicated her points (puns unintentional ?) :D


Multiculturalism is [JMM -may or may not be] a great ideal.

In the case of Canada, I think the Brits were stuck with it (I suppose transportation of the FCs, as was done with the Acadians, was an extreme option). They chose something of a work around solution. My imagination is inadequate to come up with a better one.

Now, if you want me to dream up a counterfactual history of how the FCs (based on CFM-Canada concepts) could have made the Conquest less likely - or more difficult, I'd be happy to oblige - but not here. :D

Stay safe from those incoming winter storms from the North - beautiful sunny day with no snow to add to the near 200" so far fallen. :)

marct
01-27-2009, 09:14 PM
In the case of Canada, I think the Brits were stuck with it (I suppose transportation of the FCs, as was done with the Acadians, was an extreme option). They chose something of a work around solution. My imagination is inadequate to come up with a better one.

Way too expensive, and it didn't work with the Acadians :rolleyes:.

I think you're right, we were stuck with it. At the same time, it did make a certain amount of sense if, for no other reason, as a bulwark against insurgents in the American colonies (the Quebec Act being a crucial part of that strategy).

Honestly, though, I think it was a case of having to deal with something that Whitehall didn't like, but that turned out to be a really good solution. In effect, Canada became a colonial dumping ground for Catholics in the UK without any stigma attached. Not too shaby a solution :cool:.

jmm99
01-27-2009, 09:55 PM
In effect, Canada became a colonial dumping ground for Catholics in the UK without any stigma attached.

never thought of it in that light. And, as a dumping ground for potential Irish and Scots rebels, etc. ;)

George L. Singleton
02-02-2009, 01:46 PM
If the future is the youth of Islam in SW Asia and those overseas young Muslims in Europe, even the US, then we are still in deep trouble.

A few pointers from somewhat educated Pukhtuns who blast me for trying to constructively share what Judiasm, Christianiyt and Islam have in common:

1. Islam (they believe) is right, in part because it came last, and we are heretics and wrong.

2. Islam worships Allah, who these Oxford and Cambridge, in some cases, young Muslims believe is not the same God we worship.

3. While younger and more educated Muslims I have had dialogue with now for over 3 years, off and on, via e-mails on overseas websites such as Hujra Online in some cases will admit some degree of commonality on some points of our, my wording, in common religious heritage, they loose all objectivity and reason when the topic of Muhammud and his multiple wives comes up, including his 5th wife, who he married at age 9.

4. Yet, at the same time these same young Muslims attack Saudi Wahabbi Muslims for advocating marrying 10 year old girls.

5. Also, worthy of note are the few Muslimswho openly admit that their holy Qurran is and was written over time in different Arab dialects as that language has morphed into twenth something different versions of Arabic today...leaving confusion for their scholars in translations...which is what some young Muslims slam Christianity with/over, their allegations of translation errors they alledge.

6. Finally, to shut down an othewise never ending topic, when you share that different writers of different books in the Holy Bible give varied views on the same subjects, like different people looking at the piece of art with different interpretations, all complimentary and not conflicting, they deny this is so with Christianity, but claim it is so with Islam to justify inconsistencies, conflicts, and differing interpretations caused by Arabic words which can have 20 or more different meanings for the same word.

I prefer the practical, down to earth when discussing religion instead of the very high faluting abstract, which most young education Muslims today cannot follow at all, as they have enough trouble following simple, down to earth comparisons and discussions of religion.

Whereas a Muslims entire way of life and daily existance is bound up in Islam, literally, as are their various types of government(s), they just don't get basic democracy is they are "religious" Muslims vs. some who are moving away from Islam altogether toward a secular way of life and thinking.

Just George's two cents.

jmm99
02-02-2009, 07:13 PM
seem to me to have a good practical grasp of their systematic theology (your points ## 1-2 & 5-6 - points ## 3-4 are issues of moral theology, on which I'll pass). On issues of systematic theology, there are real differences between Islam and Christianity. The latter, in its orthodox posture (e.g., Pope Benedict and John Ankerberg, to illustrate that that posture is not a monolith) is tied to Creed and Christ. Those two concepts cannot be reconciled with Islam or, for that matter, with Judaism.

Thus, on the level of systematic theology, engagement between orthodox Christianity and orthodox Islam is more likely to lead to flaming than anything else. What about engagement on a political level ?

Here, your last statement applies (I changed "is" to "if" since that seemed to be what you meant, not typed):


Whereas a Muslims entire way of life and daily existance is bound up in Islam, literally, as are their various types of government(s), they just don't get basic democracy [if] they are "religious" Muslims vs. some who are moving away from Islam altogether toward a secular way of life and thinking.

This is so true (I'm interpreting your use of "basic democracy" to equate to the Western constitutional theories of that concept).

The ideal political community for a religious Muslim (and I am not talking about extreme Salafists only) is what Paul Tillich termed a "theonomy". The particle "nomy" comes from "nomos" (law); so, theonomy is divine law. That was the religio-political state in Europe of the Middle Ages.

Maududi (http://www.ukim.org/dawah/jihad.pdf) (just to use a Pakistani example) lays out the basics of an Islamic theonomous community - and in fact feels it would be a true democracy.

Our (US) concept of democracy is very much a product of the Enlightenment, and so much more autonomous (and separated from divine law). As the Preamble proves, our basic organic law comes from the People. In Islamic political thought (e.g., Maududi), autonomy still exists (the individual has free will and can reject God), but it is very much aware of its divine ground which is supreme. Again, in their thought, our recognition of political autonomy (but without accepting the supremacy of divine law) is a degeneration into mere humanism.

Wilf has made the point, over and over, that Middle Eastern politics are very much based on religion (at least in part theonomous communities). There are, however, as you point out, secularists and pragmatists.

The Bush administration (IMO) attempted to gloss over these fundamental religious and political differences. Perhaps, President Obama has a better grasp of Islam - and his administration will take a more pragmatic approach. We shall see.

George L. Singleton
02-02-2009, 11:54 PM
analysis.

Trying to talk "politics" with university and high school age Pukhtuns invariably is to the majority them "talking religion."

Your implication is that we Westerners have the burden to bending over backwards to accommodate them and their unusual beliefs.

I have a problem with this personally, as it offends me in what I believe and practice, religiously, as a [Protestant} Christian. Most I correspond with via both their mainline website and via individual e-mails they sometimes send me on the side, outside their website [my e-mail address is readily avaiable in DAWN.com archives in many letters published there, as well as whenever a letter is published [occasionally even an article is published] in the Peshawar FRONTIER POST.

Mature website respondents/correspondents, as in adult members of Hujra Online.com, have no problem discussing different interpretations from Abraham to current times. But, many youths don't even know their own religious history and having built Islam from and on Judaism and Christianity...my opinion.

Have to admit that when you get into Tillitson et al you are the level of an old friend in Nashville who is a semi-retired egg headed Episcopalian Priest who once taught in seminary.

I am just a simple country Methodist, who was raised as a fundamentalist Southern Baptist in my youth...giving me a Calvanist outlook in a Wesley setting...pretty hairy!

Cheers, and I make so many typos feel free to correct me any time,
George

jmm99
02-03-2009, 06:07 AM
from GLS
Your implication is that we Westerners have the burden to bending over backwards to accommodate them and their unusual beliefs.

definitely not my implication - in fact, quite the opposite, because bending over backwards (or forwards) would violate my concept of the separation of church and state.

1. Muslims (and Roman Catholics and Southern Baptists) should have freedom to practice their own religion so long as they do not injure others.

2. Special US laws for Muslims (or Roman Catholics or Southern Baptists) are unacceptable to me.

3. Sharia Law (in the US in any guise) is in its fundamental construct contrary to the US Constitution, which I'm thrice-sworn to support.

4. I will not accept dhimmitude imposed because of my religion (whether by Muslims or anyone else) - and would die first (relatively easy at my age :) ).

I hope this clarifies any misunderstanding of where I stand.

William F. Owen
02-03-2009, 07:59 AM
Wilf has made the point, over and over, that Middle Eastern politics are very much based on religion (at least in part theonomous communities). There are, however, as you point out, secularists and pragmatists.


I have, but I should also add the dimension that religion in the Middle East is why you believe something, not how you believe it. Very, very little conflict actually comes from interference in religious practice. It is mostly about land and blood, and they inform belief, in the context of religion, - which is why you see Hezbollah victimising Druze and Sunni families in the Lebanon.

Now you don't need an HTT to understand this. It's all pretty simple, once you get that, and it's what makes the Israelis so difficult to second guess, as they have lots of competing sets of beliefs, as they are more politically and ethnically diverse.

Bob's World
02-03-2009, 12:39 PM
Not specifically about any of this, but indirectly about all of it; if you get the chance read or listen to "Children of Jihad" by Jared Cohen. Great insights from the recent solo travels of a young American jewish man to meet and learn about young Muslims in several of the most heated areas of the Middle East.

Will agree with WILF that it is not about religion. He boils it down to "blood and land," and certainly that is always involved. I boil it down to one word: Respect.

Respect is a complicated emotion, toward the top of Maslow's heirarchy, but it is the one I believe that is most likely to drive men to a very committed form of conflict. From individual duals, to the American Revolution, to much of the Muslim strife in the world today. We may not know ####-all about Islam, but we all understand respect. Focusing on understanding the respect-based issues of the region and attempting to address them first would in my mind be a wise strategic sea change of approach.