Sunday, January 25, 2009

Islamic Peacemaking Since 9/11: United States Institute of Peace

USIP: January 2009, Special Report No. 218
Islamic Peacemaking Since 9/11 By David Smock and Qamar-ul Huda

Summary
■ Muslims in general and Muslim leaders particularly have often been severely criticized for not more energetically condemning the violent acts of Muslim extremists.
■ Violent extremists are on one edge of the Muslim community. They are counter-balanced by a growing movement of Muslim peacemakers.
■ Equally as notable as Islamic militancy but less noted are Muslims’ 1) widespread condemnation of terrorism and other violent acts; 2) promotion of interfaith dialogue; 3) education of Muslim youth and reeducation of extremist Muslims; and 4) promotion of peaceful conflict resolution.

About the Report
The Religion and Peacemaking program conducts research, identifies best practices, and develops new peacebuilding tools for religious leaders and organizations. It also helps define and shape the field of religious peacebuilding.

USIP’s Religion and Peacemaking program has produced a series of Special Reports on Islam, including “Applying Islamic Principles in the Twenty-first Century,” “Ijtihad,” “Islam and Democracy,” “Islamic Perspectives on Peace and Violence,” and “The Diversity of Muslims in the United States.” This report is the most recent addition to that series. It is coauthored by David Smock, associate vice president for the Religion and Peacemaking program, and Qamar-ul Huda, senior program officer in that program. The research assistant for this project was Basma Yousef.

For complete report (pdf), click here

1 comment:

Heather, Tanenbaum said...

I'm happy to find your blog through a technorati search for "religious peacebuilding." Thank you for the resource!

You might already know the work of Azhar Hussain and the Madrasa Enhancement Project?

I was at the University of Bradford in 2005-06. Do you work much with Philip Lewis there?

Best wishes.