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Muslim-Jewish discussions boost interfaith dialogue
By Oliver Palmer palmerol@grinnell.edu
A series of Muslim-Jewish dialogue discussions began this fall, created and hosted by Imam Kamal Hammouda and Associate Chaplain and Rabbi Sarah Brammer-Shlay, offering students an opportunity to engage with topics relevant to the two religions in a structured, non-inflammatory way.
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An inspiration for these dialogues comes from the term “Judeo-Christian values,” which Hammouda said implies Christians share similar values to Jewish people but not Muslims.
“I read that as a way that people, specifically some aspects of the Christian community, try to push away Muslims and say that, Jewish values are like Christian values,” Brammer-Shlay said, “I think that that is often used in a very Islamophobic sort of way.”
The first session was on the Israel-Palestine conflict, the second session on March 15 focused on similarities and contrasts of Islam and Judaism, and the third session, held on April 27 in HSSC S1325 will be an interactive text study of the Quran and the Torah.
The Israel-Palestine session drew a crowd of roughly 45 people, said Brammer-Shlay. During the discussion, Brammer-Shlay and Hammouda shared how they each approach the issue as religious leaders and their differing perspectives on the conflict.
Brammer-Shlay said she has a great deal of respect for Hammouda and hopes that their dialogues together show students that relationships can have tension, and still be healthy.
“The sense I get from both students and staff and faculty is there’s a desire to talk about it,” Bram- mer-Shlay said about the Israel-Palestine conflict, “but there’s a nervousness and how to approach it, so one of our goals in doing that was to model how to have conversations about it too.”