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The Importance Of Meeting Face-To-Face

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  • The Importance Of Meeting Face-To-Face

    THE IMPORTANCE OF MEETING FACE-TO-FACE

    Indian Muslims, CA
    Sept 26 2007

    Posted September 26th, 2007 by TariqueMuslim World News Articles By
    Susan Harrison, Common Ground News Service

    In 2004 I went to Qom, Iran to participate in a conference called
    "Revelation and Authority", a dialogue between North American Christian
    Mennonite scholars and local Muslim Shiite scholars. A few months ago,
    we met again - this time in Waterloo in Ontario, Canada.

    It was a joyful, collegial reunion and, in addition, a nonverbal
    connection seemed to occur when we looked at each other again,
    face-to-face.

    Each time we gather for dialogue, there is a kind of audible relief in
    realising that we both really exist, that we are dedicated to making
    this dialogue happen.

    Face-to-face meetings are the moment when the research and
    media-informed opinions we hold are measured against the experience
    of the encounter with the other. There is something profound about
    meeting face-to-face: noticing that someone limps or has a hard time
    staying awake in a long lecture, seeing the way someone's eyes light
    up when they hear a new idea, or watching the quizzical looks on a
    Muslim's face when a Mennonite explains the worship of a triune God
    (a God in 3 forms).

    People are like "living books", but unlike a published paperback,
    our plots are constantly changing. And, as living books, our stories
    interact with each other when we meet; they take account of the new
    characters, who in turn affect the plot line and the ensuing chapters.

    However, these kinds of meetings are becoming increasingly more
    difficult to arrange these days because travel visas are regularly
    denied on both sides. Tense political relations in past months and
    tighter borders in the wake of 9/11 have resulted in stringent travel
    restrictions and have made such face-to-face visits more difficult.

    The Mennonite Central Committee (MCC), a religion-based non-profit
    development organisation, first became involved in Iran following
    the 1990 earthquake. A friendship formed between Ed Martin,
    the then-director of MCC's Asia desk and the Director General of
    International Affairs in Iran, Sadreddin Sadr. Working together in
    disaster relief, they shared a vision to build relationships that
    would un-demonise Iranians for North Americans and vice versa. A
    student exchange program was proposed and Toronto, Canada, where a
    sizeable Mennonite graduate student community could be found, became
    the venue. The Imam Khomeini Education and Research Institute (IKERI)
    volunteered to host Christian Mennonite students in Qom.

    In addition to the student exchange program, which began in 1998,
    the MCC developed "learning tours" that brought groups to Iran on
    itinerated programs. Two tours of 10 days each allowed Mennonites
    and Muslims to meet and learn about each other first hand.

    An example of the power of first hand meetings is captured in the
    remark of an Iranian Muslim, attending a Canadian school: "meeting
    face-to-face works as a source of miraculous mutual understanding. I
    can say that people who are afraid of you, as a Muslim or as an
    Iranian, after 10 to 30 minutes of conversation begin to recognise
    you as a human being."

    As I write this, I am aware that I had been planning on attending
    a conference, "One God of Abraham, Different Traditions", at Eastern
    Mennonite University in September 2007. The participants were Mennonite
    scholars and a guest delegation from the Islamic Republic of Iran led
    by Ayatollah Araqi, head of the Organization of Culture and Islamic
    Relations. The delegation included Iranian religious leaders and
    scholars, Morris Motamed, a Jewish member of Iran's Parliament and
    Archbishop Sarkissian of the Armenian Church in Iran.

    One week before the guests were due to arrive, 4 out of 15 visas were
    refused for "security reasons", though the US State Department did
    not send this message in writing. Since Ayatollah Araqi was among
    those refused entry, the visit was unfortunately called off.

    This is not only a US-specific problem. In May 2007, 15 North American
    Mennonites were denied entry into Iran for a fully itinerated learning
    tour. During this same time, the Western media accused the institute
    of having a direct line to President Ahmadinejad's government,
    and critics accused the MCC of therefore supporting Ahmadinejad's
    government by association with IKERI.

    The notion that dialogue between people of different faiths poses a
    security risk to their home countries continues to be the underlying
    theme of this ongoing problem of blocked encounters. N. Gerald Shenk,
    a professor at Eastern Mennonite University, wonders "whether the
    freedom protected by 'security' overrides the freedom to build better
    understanding across these dangerous divides."

    Face-to-face encounters, according to contact theories, will break
    down stereotypes and build the understanding and trust that is greatly
    needed between the West and Iran. Yet as Martin remarked when the
    visas were refused, "It is back to 'square one' to figure out how to
    develop relationships of understanding, trust and friendship between
    Iranians and Americans that will prevent war between our countries."

    While people can criticise the MCC for engaging with IKERI as Muslim
    dialogue partners, the fact remains that a constructive relationship
    has developed between the two communities, and if allowed to grow it
    could influence the stories of those individuals who are touched by it.
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