Thursday, October 11, 2007

Battle for the Holy Land

"It's ironic, at times like this you pray, but a bomb blew the mosque up yesterday." This verse, from the song Hands Held High by Linkin Park, ran through my head repeatedly as we watched "Battle for the Holy Land." It made me so sad to see the two groups fighting over a place that many hold to be sacred. For me, the fighting seemed so useless.

I don't see how either side can win this battle at this point with the tactics they are using. This continuous cycle can never stop the violence, it will have to be broken before any form of real progress can actually be made. I know from personal experience, at least to a small extent, that the philosophy "an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth" just doesn't work out very well, so this whole 'you terrorize me so I'm going to terrorize you' isn't going to get anyone anywhere, except for maybe buried in the ground.

It is paradoxical, at least in my mind, that both sides believe they are doing the will of the same God. A God that, by the way, is loving and forgiving. I just don't understand the mentality behind the fighting. One side is going to target a known organizer of terrorist attacks, and in the process make some people angry enough to join the other side and plot another attack. The other side feels that they are martyrs who will be blessed by Allah when they kill themselves in the process of killing dozens of other people whose only wrong has been trying to find a place to live and happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time.

I am not the type of person who can't watch a bloody movie. The problem with this movie was that, for starters, it seems unnecessary and pointless, not to mention that the battle fields are city streets that hold deep religious meaning to millions of people around the world. On top of that, this is actually happening right now, as we sit in a quiet classroom contemplating where religion came from and why pilgrimage is so important to people.

Tuesday, October 9, 2007

Understanding Islam

I have known for some time that Islam was connected to Judaism and Christianity, and found that very interesting. It wasn't until class however that I got a clear picture of what it was that united these religions, and caused a lot of the conflicts between them that we see today.

All three of these religions are united through Abraham. They all claim the inheritance that God promised Abraham and his children, including the Holy Land and Jerusalem. Judaism, Christianity, and Islam all worship one God. Actually, they all worship the same God. Islam is however the youngest of these three religions, beginning approximately 610 CE.

The Islamic tradition teaches that the Koran is the purest form of God's word since it never went through a period of oral tradition, unlike the scriptures of Judaism and Christianity. Although all three are connected to Abraham, Islam follows the path of Ishmael and Hagar instead of that of Issac and Sarah. There are five acts that are supposed to be carried out by devout Muslims which constitute the Five Pillars of Islam. These acts are (in general terms) to pray their profession of faith when they wake in the morning and before going to sleep at night, a ritual prayer five (specific) times a day facing Mecca, fasting during the month of Ramadan, acts of charity, and (if able) a pilgrimage to Mecca to perform the Hajj.

I feel that it is important in today's society to understand the driving principles behind Islam. It is easy for those ignorant of the religion to be misled by the actions of the few extremists. This is especially true in areas, such as rural Iowa/Nebraska/South Dakota, where the Muslim population is very small and there are no other examples of the religion to look to. Understanding is a crucial part of tolerance, which is something that our world today greatly needs.

Tuesday, October 2, 2007

Judaism: They've Had it Tough

It's not something that I think about a lot but, the Jews have had a tough time. The most obvious thing is the Holocaust in WWII but they've been picked on from the beginning. Their first three generations were okay, but everyone around them thought they were weak and weird because they only had one god. Then all of the Israelites had to move to Egypt because that was the only place for them to find food in the famine and eventually they became slaves.

God finally gets them out of Egypt but then they have to wander around in the wilderness for forty years (because they were complaining). Eventually they get back to where they are supposed to be and they have to fight off everyone who's moved onto the land. Several years of ups and downs later, Babylonia completely takes over, destroys the temple, and forces them to move. It isn't until Persia conquers Babylon that they can go back to their promised land, but they still have to serve the Persians. They go through Greek and Roman rule before they are completely kicked out and spread all over Europe. Many are still trying to find a way to get back and those who have are caught up in a dispute with others in the area about who has the right to live there.

I don't know about you, but I think that the Jewish people have had to take a lot of getting pushed around and beating down. Yet it is the Jewish religion that monotheism started. Try to imagine what the Western world would be like if monotheism hadn't lasted. I have no idea exactly how life would be but it would definitely be quite a bit different from what we're used to.