Mennonites are used to being misunderstood, both in negative
and positive ways. We often hear others ask about horse and buggies or
plain black clothing when they hear we are Mennonites.
On the other hand, some people laud Mennonites for being committed to peace and justice, not realizing the great diversity in our ranks
on those subjects.
We all carry prejudices. We prejudge others, make
assumptions about them, often out of ignorance about those people and what they
may believe.
Much of our media betrays great ignorance about religion—not
just Mennonites but many religious groups. And if you spend much time on the
blogosphere, you encounter great ignorance as people spout views that are at
times hateful, certainly prejudiced and that show ignorance about the groups
they are putting down in order to advance their own views.
One of the groups most commonly misunderstood are Muslims,
whose numbers are growing rapidly in the United States. And worldwide Islam is
the second largest religion.
Nevertheless, it is treated as monolithic and homogenous. As
religion scholar Philip Jenkins writes, “Arguably, over the span of its
development, Islam worldwide is quite as diverse as Christianity.”
One of the stereotypes about Islam is that it is Arab, yet,
Jenkins writes, “Of the world’s eight largest Muslim countries, only
one—Egypt—is Arab in language and culture, and it would not be too far off the
mark to see Islam as a religion of South and Southeast Asia.”
A recent book, Woman, Man and God in Modern Islam by
Theodore Friend (Eerdmans, 2012, $35), is an excellent source for getting to
know modern Islam.
Friend, a senior fellow at the Foreign Policy Research
Institute and an award-winning historian, traveled across Asia and the Middle
East in order to understand firsthand the life situations of women in
Indonesia, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Iran and Turkey. The book relates hundreds
of encounters and conversations with people he met along the way.
Friend writes that the reader will find “respect for Islam
conjoined with faith in women and in their creative and productive potential.”
Meanwhile the media regularly report bombings by Islamicists
but ignore peaceful overtures by Muslims, such as “A Commond Word” in 2007.
Ignorance of religion has enormous consequences, whether
it’s a white supremacist killing Sikhs or U.S. soldiers burning copies of the
Qur’an or the U.S. invasion of Iraq helping overturn half a century of women’s
right to be treated as equal citizens in Iraq.
And with the recent rioting over the anti-Islam video reveals religious ignorance going many directions.
Religious ignorance extends beyond Islam. Every day some
media reinforce views of religious groups that are simplistic and fail to build
understanding.
One media source that helps counter this practice is
Religion News Service. For example, the weekly report dated Sept. 5 included an
article on Mormons okaying Coke and Pepsi, one on Seventh-day Adventists
arguing about female clergy, a Q&A with Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf of the
“Ground Zero mosque,” one on Jews in New Orleans, a Q&A with David Niose,
president of the American Humanist Association, and one on the trial of Amish
bishop Samuel Mullet Sr., whose followers forcibly cut the beards of Amish men.
There are many sources for learning about others and their
beliefs before we make judgments about them. Jesus’ warning about judging
others (Matthew 7:1) is pertinent. Let's take time to understand others' religious beliefs before we make judgments about them.
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