| 

GANPublications

Service Menu

  Add Site to Favorites
  Add Page to Favorites
  Make Homepage
  Share This Page
We have 1023 guests and 1 member online
Logo KLM
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| | Follow Global_Arab_Net on Twitter | Linkedin
Jewish Muslim understanding - Making twins out of synagogues and mosques
Global Arab Network - - Adam Turner
Wednesday, 20 January 2010 00:40
Interfaith_muslim_jews_
At a time when many have despaired of hope for Jewish-Muslim understanding due to the ongoing impasse in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, nearly 200 Muslims and Jews gathered in Paris recently to say: "Now is the time to build ties of friendship and understanding between our faiths for the sake of our children and children's children."

A mixed audience of rabbis, imams and Muslim and Jewish activists from around Europe and the United States gathered on the evening of 8 December at the glittering City Hall of the 16th Arondissement to hear this inspiring message of hope at the first annual dinner gala of the Jewish-Muslim Friendship Society of France (AJMF).

The keynote speaker at the event was Rabbi Marc Schneier, President of the New York-based Foundation for Ethnic Understanding (FFEU), which is working to create a worldwide movement of Muslims and Jews committed to communication, reconciliation and cooperation. He praised the pioneering work of Rabbi Michel Serfaty of the AJMF, which last month brought together 30 mosques and 30 synagogues in France to take part in the FFEU-sponsored 2nd Annual Weekend of Twinning of Mosques and Synagogues Across North America and Europe.

The programme, which began on 13 November 2009 and continued through the end of December, involved 120 one-on-one "twinning" events between mosques and synagogues in the United States, Canada, and eight European countries.

Rabbi Schneier spoke of the efforts of Rabbi Serfaty and AJMF, which for the past five years have sent a coterie of activists on a "Tour de France" bus trip to communities across France and nearby countries where Muslims and Jews live in uneasy proximity and where many attacks against Jews have taken place, in order to open lines of communication and combat fear.

He said, "At a time when the conventional wisdom says that our two peoples must live in perpetual conflict, Rabbi Serfaty and the AJMF are showing that there is another, much better way. We are gratified that this is happening not only in France, where conflict between Muslims and Jews has been especially intense, but across North America and Europe as well. In the spirit of Chanukah [better known as Hanukkah], let us keep aglow the light of caring and understanding and allow that light to guide the reconciliation and cooperation of Muslims and Jews worldwide, including [in] the Middle East."

The gala was co-sponsored by the Representative Council of French Jewish Institutions (CRIF, an umbrella body of French Jewish organisations), the Great Mosque of Paris and the Rabbinate of Greater Paris. Attending the gathering were top leaders of the European Jewish Congress and European imams and rabbis from France, the United Kingdom, Italy, Switzerland, Germany, Holland and Belgium, who previously held successful Weekend of Twinning events in their respective countries.

The event was both a celebration of what FFEU and its European partners have accomplished together during the past year and an opportunity to chart future FFEU work with Jewish and Muslim leaders in the years ahead.

Rabbi Schneier sees Europe as a vital region in the global initiative by Muslims and Jews dedicated to communication, reconciliation and cooperation: "We have begun a process that defies some common stereotypes yet represents a rising tide of grass roots sentiments in both the Muslim and Jewish communities worldwide."

Noting that FFEU's outreach has helped to trigger a significant warming of Jewish-Muslim relations in France, which had deteriorated to a dangerous degree in the wake of the 2009 Gaza War, Rabbi Schneier said, "We hope to be able to achieve similar results in other important European countries like Britain, Germany and Italy in 2010".

Global Arab Network

* The Foundation for Ethnic Understanding (www.ffeu.org), a non-profit organisation under the leadership of Rabbi Marc Schneier, President, and Russell Simmons, Chairman, is dedicated to promoting racial harmony and strengthening inter-group and inter-religious relations. This article is distributed by the Common Ground News Service (CGNews) with permission from The Foundation for Ethnic Understanding.
 

Add comment

The opinions of the authors in articles published are theirs alone and do not necessarily reflect the views of Global Arab Network
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Published comments are the opinions of private individuals and do not reflect the views of Global Arab Network

--- Newsletter Subscription

Newsletter & events update

-- Weather London

Clear

20°C

London

Clear

Humidity: 83%

Wind: N at 4 mph

  • Wed Mostly Sunny

    25°C 16°C

  • Thu Mostly Sunny

    26°C 17°C

  • Fri Clear

    20°C 15°C

  • Sat Clear

    21°C 15°C

Book a Stay at a Golf Resort
-
This site uses advanced software, which requires latest Browser (Internet Explorer 8 or Firefox). Please click to download free
firefoxlogowithebackground_copy
---------------
or free upgrade
internetexplorer8_free_upgrade_copy
---------------
Follow Global_Arab_Net on Twitter
-

Banner
© 2006-2012 Global Arab Network | Privacy Policy | Terms and Conditions
Banner