It
is our role as decision makers, professors, preachers, priests and
pastors to raise our children properly, to serve humanity and not give
way to extremism. Awqaf Ministry Secretary General Mohammad Roud
Accepting the other as is and
granting all citizens, regardless of their religion, their rights is the
only path to reaching and practising freedom. Father
Imad Twal, Catholic priest, Director of Our Lady, Queen of Peace, Center
Awqaf Ministry Secretary General Mohammad Roud speaks at a conference on
‘Extremism...
Reasons and Solution’ in Amman on Wednesday (Petra photo)
Reasons and Solution’ in Amman on Wednesday (Petra photo)
AMMAN
— Extremism, a major dilemma facing the world today, is an ideology
created and nurtured by radicals with a specific agenda and has no
relation to religion or its high ethical and spiritual values,
participants at a conference said on Wednesday.
Christianity
and Islam do not divide people, but seek to bring them together, Royal
Institute for Inter-Faith Studies (RIIFS) Director Michel Hamarneh told
The Jordan Times.
“The
call in both Christianity and Islam is for the better and brotherhood
of human beings, in addition to spreading love and respect,” Hamarneh
said at a conference on “Extremism... Reasons and Solution”.
The
two-day event, which aims to spread the values of the Amman Message,
hosted Muslim and Christian religious and political figures, as well as
university professors from around the Middle East.
The
Amman Message, issued in November 2004, “sought to declare what Islam
is and what it is not, and what actions represent it and what actions do
not. Its goal was to clarify to the modern world the true nature of
Islam and the nature of true Islam,” according to its official website.
“The
desired result is that decision makers attending the seminar will have a
positive impact on the people around them, spreading awareness among
the younger generation, but most importantly taking decisions that will
positively change the existing conditions,” Hamarneh added.
In
his opening address, he noted that the social and economic
circumstances, such as unemployment and the different classes of
society, have played a major role in nurturing extremism.
Hamarneh
said media and education in “our societies” play a great role in
creating extremism and extreme reactions, manipulating the minds and
feelings of impressionable youths.
Mohammad
Abu Zaid, a guest speaker from Lebanon who is a judge and professor of
Islamic thought at the University of Saida, said the results of research
and studies he conducted show that poor economic conditions in any
society nurture extremism and terrorism.
He added that poverty alone does not create extremism, but is a major contributing factor.
Husni
Ayish, Jordanian author and intellectual, told The Jordan Times that a
serious society which seeks positive change should first start reviewing
its educational system.
He
warned against radical teachers and professors who spread extremist
thought among their students, in addition to media outlets which,
instead of raising awareness against terrorism, are but “extremists who
encourage this exact thought”.
Ghazi
Musharbash, a former MP, said Western media’s attack on the Middle East
affects all Arabs, Christians and Muslims alike, “for the benefit of
the Israelis”.
“The
Western media tries its best to show that Arabs are terrorists, but the
reality is that Israel is the terrorist country since it occupies
Palestine,” Musharbash added.
“I
refuse to believe that those who bomb churches and cut off the heads of
Christian monks and children in Syria are Muslims like the people our
parents and grandparents live together with in peace and harmony.”
He
added that it is crucial that the media, along with decision makers,
should use the West’s own language to address its people and leaders.
“We should be direct, instead of beating around the bush.”
Speaking
at the event, Awqaf Ministry Secretary General Mohammad Roud said
extremists and moderates are found in every religion, calling for
differentiating between Islam and wrong practices in the name of Islam.
The media, he said, can play either a positive or negative role in feeding or reducing the impact of terrorism.
“It
is our role as decision makers, professors, preachers, priests and
pastors to raise our children properly” to serve humanity and not give
way to extremism, Roud added in a speech delivered on behalf of Awqaf
Minister Hayel Dawood.
Father
Imad Twal, a Catholic priest, said accepting the other as is and
granting all citizens, regardless of their religion, their rights is the
only path to reaching and practising freedom.
The
conference, supported by the EU, is organised by the RIIFS in
cooperation with the ministries of awqaf and planning, and the British
Council.
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