Special Report 201 February 2008
Special Report
The views expressed in this report do not necessarily
reflect the views of the United States Institute of Peace,
which does not advocate specific policy positions .
Contents
Religion and Conflict 2
Religious Activism to Promote Peace with Justice 3
Religious Mediation and Facilitation 4
Interfaith Dialogue 6
Conclusion 8
About the Report
Since its creation in 2000, the
program has worked with local partners to promote
religious peacemaking in many parts of the world,
including
that experience. David Smock has directed the
Institute’s Religion and Peacemaking program
since its inception. He is also its vice president of
the Center for Mediation and Conflict Resolution.
David Smock
Religion in World Affairs
Its Role in Conflict and Peace
Summary
• No major religion has been exempt from complicity in violent conflict. Yet we need
to beware of an almost universal propensity to oversimplify the role that religion
plays in international affairs. Religion is not usually the sole or even primary cause
of conflict.
• With so much emphasis on religion as a source of conflict, the role of religion as a
force in peacemaking is usually overlooked.
• Religious affiliation and conviction often motivates religious communities to
advocate particular peace-related government policies. Religious communities also
directly oppose repression and promote peace and reconciliation.
• Religious leaders and institutions can mediate in conflict situations, serve as a
communication link between opposing sides, and provide training in peacemaking
methodologies. This form of religious peacemaking garners less public attention but
is growing in importance.
• Interfaith dialogue is another form of religious peacemaking. Rather than seeking
to resolve a particular conflict, it aims to defuse interfaith tensions that may cause
future conflict or derive from previous conflict. Interfaith dialogue is expanding
even in places where interreligious tensions are highest. Not infrequently, the most
contentious interfaith relationships can provide the context for the most meaningful
and productive exchanges.
• Given religion’s importance as both a source of international conflict and a resource
for peacemaking, it is regrettable that the
religious issues and relate to religious actors. If the
itself into international conflicts or build deeper and more productive relationships
with countries around the world, it needs to devise a better strategy to effectively
and respectfully engage with the religious realm.
In recent decades, religion has assumed unusual prominence in international affairs. A
recent article in The Economist asserts that, if there ever was a global drift toward secu-
United States Ins titute of Peace www.usip.org
larism, it has been halted and probably reversed.1 In the article, Philip Jenkins, a noted
scholar from
century they will see religion as “the prime animating and destructive force in human
affairs, guiding attitudes to political liberty and obligation, concepts of nationhood and,
of course, conflicts and wars.” The article then cites statistics from a public opinion survey
in
than nationality. Nigerians are thus more likely to identify themselves first and foremost
as Christians or Muslims rather than as Nigerians. The horrendous events of September 11,
the conflagration in
confirm in the popular mind that religion lies behind much of contemporary international
conflict.
Religion and Conflict
Throughout the world, no major religion is exempt from complicity in violent conflict.
Religious conviction certainly was one of the motivations for the September 11 attacks
and other violent actions by Muslim extremists in
monks assert an exclusively Buddhist identity for
conflict there. Some Christian and Muslim leaders from former
as protecting their faiths when they defended violence against the opposing faith communities
in the Balkan wars.
Yet we need to beware of an almost universal propensity to oversimplify the role that
religion plays in international affairs.
Iranian-Persian nationalism as it is to the dictates of Shiite clerics. The international policies
that
but rather political power calculations and a desire to preserve the quasi-theocratic status
quo. Similarly, in
over religious doctrine and practice, but rather from historical and contemporary competition
for state power. Sunni and Shiite identities are as much ethnic as religious, and
intergroup relations between the two are very similar, though more violent, than relations
between Walloons and Flemish in
language and culture rather than religious belief constitute the primary sources of division.
Meanwhile, the Kurds—the third principal constituent community in
based. Most Kurds are also Sunni Muslims. This is not to suggest that religious identity
is synonymous with ethnic identity, as in many circumstances religious identity implies
explicitly religious behavior and belief. But in many cases the lines between ethnic and
religious identities become so blurred that parsing them to assign blame for violence is difficult
if not impossible. Religious identity has often been used to mobilize one side against
the other, as has happened in
calls to defend one’s faith community. But to describe many such conflicts as rooted in
religious differences or to imply that theological or doctrinal differences are the principal
causes of conflict is to seriously oversimplify and misrepresent a complex situation.
The decades-long civil war in
Muslims and Christians, with the north being predominantly Muslim and the south predominantly
Christian or animist. There is some truth to this characterization, particularly
after 1989, when an Islamic fundamentalist government came to power in
an agenda to Islamicize all of
well beyond religion and rarely are the disagreements religious or theological in character.
Northerners speak Arabic and want Arabic to be
generally speak Arabic only as a second or third language, if at all, and prefer English as
the lingua franca. Northerners are more likely to identify with the Arab world, whereas
southerners tend to identify themselves as Africans. Thus, racial identity is fundamental
About the Institute
The United States Institute of Peace is an independent, nonpartisan
institution established and funded by Congress. Its
goals are to help prevent and resolve violent conflicts, promote
post-conflict peacebuilding, and increase conflict-management
tools, capacity, and intellectual capital worldwide.
The Institute does this by empowering others with knowledge,
skills, and resources, as well as by its direct involvement in
conflict zones around the globe.
Board of Directors
J. Robinson West (Chair), Chairman, PFC Energy, Washington,
D.C. • María Otero (Vice Chairman), President, ACCION International,
Government Affairs, International Justice Mission,
D.C. • Anne H. Cahn, Former Scholar in Residence,
James R. Schlesinger Professor of Strategic Studies, School of
Foreign Service,
• Laurie S. Fulton, Partner, Williams and
D.C. • Charles Horner, Senior Fellow, Hudson Institute,
World Institute on Disability • George E. Moose, Adjunct
Professor of Practice, The
D.C. • Jeremy A. Rabkin, Professor of Law, George
Director, Primparous Productions, Inc. • Judy Van Rest,
Executive Vice President, International Republican Institute,
Members ex officio
Condoleezza Rice, Secretary of State • Robert M. Gates,
Secretary of Defense • Richard H. Solomon, President, United
States Institute of Peace (nonvoting) • Frances C. Wilson,
In many cases the lines
between ethnic and religious
identities become so blurred
that parsing them to assign
blame for violence is difficult
if not impossible.
to the division between north and south. The religious division between Christian and
Muslim happens to overlap with these racial, ethnic, and geographical divisions, but the
conflict’s divide has not been confined to or even dominated by religion. British colonial
policy also reinforced the divisions between north and south, and over the past twenty
years Christians have fought Christians in the south and Muslims have fought Muslims in
In
the cause of conflict. The popular press asserts that tens of thousands of Nigerians have
died in religious warfare over the last decade. True, many died, both Christians and Muslims,
in riots over Danish cartoons depicting Mohammed. Others were killed when Christians
opposed extending the authority of sharia courts in several northern states. But the
causes of many of the killings have not been exclusively religious. In places like
and
the causes also include the placing of markets, economic competition, occupational differences,
the ethnic identity of government officials, respect for traditional leaders, and
competition between migrants and indigenous populations.2
In both
Islam will prevail. But in both cases clan and ethnic differences define the composition
of the forces in conflict as much as religious differences do. In the Arab-Israeli conflict,
the management of and access to religious sites are sources of serious disagreement and
extreme religious groups—both Jewish and Muslim—exacerbate the problem. But religion
is not the principal factor underlying the conflict; rather, conflict is principally over
control of land and state sovereignty.
All of these cases demonstrate that while religion is an important factor in conflict,
often marking identity differences, motivating conflict, and justifying violence, religion
is not usually the sole or primary cause of conflict. The reality is that religion becomes
intertwined with a range of causal factors—economic, political, and social—that define,
propel, and sustain conflict. Certainly, religious disagreements must be addressed
alongside these economic, political, and social sources to build lasting reconciliation.
Fortunately, many of the avenues to ameliorate religious violence lie within the religious
realm itself.
Religious Activism to Promote Peace with Justice
The public perception prevails that religion is a principal source of international conflict,
but the role of religion as a force in peacemaking is usually overlooked. The
became heavily engaged in trying to bring peace to
pressured the Bush administration to deepen its engagement. Evangelical concern was
based initially on an oversimplified view of the conflict, that an Islamic fundamentalist
government was forcing Christians and animists in southern
As evangelicals mobilized, they developed a more nuanced and authentic understanding
of the conflict. Jews have joined Christians and others in bringing public attention to the
crisis in
memories of the Holocaust.
Religious communities have also directly opposed repression and promoted peace and
reconciliation. Churches in
More famously, clergymen Desmond Tutu, Frank Chikane, and Beyers Naude in
worked to break the bonds of apartheid. This effort entailed not only civil disobedience
and advocacy for international sanctions against
South African Christians into recognizing that their effort to justify apartheid contradicted
biblical teachings. The Dutch Reformed Church—sometimes described as “the Nationalist
Party at prayer”—did not fully accept that argument until after the government aban-
Religion is not usually the sole
or primary cause of conflict.
Religious communities have also
directly opposed repression and
promoted peace and reconciliation.
doned apartheid, but many whites did become uncomfortable with the structures they
had devised and imposed.
More recently, the civil disobedience of Buddhist monks in
illustrated how religion could motivate the promotion of human rights and peace. In
addition to the street demonstrations that garnered so much national and international
attention, the monks’ refusal to accept alms from members of the military was a particularly
poignant declaration that the regime’s policies and actions violated Buddhism’s
fundamental precepts. The regime recognized that the demonstrations generated much
greater international attention and domestic pressure than would have been the case if
they had been exclusively secular. The monks’ moral authority and respect that others
have for them, the symbolic resources they drew upon, their chants for compassion, and
their nonviolent approach all contributed to a deeply persuasive message and image. The
largely religious leadership of the U.S. civil rights movement in the 1960s carried similar
moral weight and authority.
According to Douglas Johnston, in promoting peace and reconciliation, religious leaders
and organizations offer credibility as trusted institutions; a respected set of values;
moral warrants to oppose injustice; unique leverage for promoting reconciliation among
conflicting parties; capability to mobilize community, nation, and international support
for a peace process; and a sense of calling that often inspires perseverance in the face of
major and otherwise debilitating obstacles.3
Religious Mediation and Facilitation
Religious leaders and institutions can be mediators in conflict situations, serve as a communication
link between opposing sides, and provide training in peacemaking methodologies.
In the summer of 2001, Rabbi Menachem Froman, chief rabbi of the Tekoa settlement
in the West Bank, approached the United States Institute of Peace and indicated that one
of the two chief rabbis of Israel, Bakshi Doron, and the chief Palestinian sheikh, Talal Sidr,
wanted to come to the Institute to sign a joint declaration for religious peace between
Israel and Palestine. While the Institute welcomed this initiative, it did not turn out to
be feasible, largely because of visa problems that Sidr encountered. But then Archbishop
of Canterbury George Carey became involved and in January 2002 helped organize a large
conference in Alexandria, Egypt for many of the most highly placed Jewish, Muslim,
and Christian leaders from Israel and Palestine. The participants signed a declaration of
religious peace that became known as the Alexandria Declaration. The Alexandria process
has continued since then, with regular interfaith meetings of religious leaders held in
Jerusalem, guided by Canon Andrew White of the Foundation for Relief and Reconciliation
in the Middle East (FRRME), Rabbi Michael Melchior, and, until his death, Sheikh Talal
Sidr. The Institute has been the principal financial backer of the Alexandria process since
it began. With financial support from the Institute and other sources, Rabbi Melchior has
also established centers in Israel and Gaza to promote interfaith dialogue more broadly
in Israel and Palestine.
Recently, under the leadership of Rabbi David Rosen and Muslim and Christian leaders
in Israel and Palestine, a new interfaith organization has been launched with a similar mission
to that the Alexandria process, namely, to provide a religious track to what hopefully
will be a political track to promote peace in the Middle East. Before the Annapolis peace
conference in November 2007, this Council of Religious Institutions in the Holy Land sent
a delegation to Washington consisting of the highest-ranking Jewish, Muslim, and Christian
leaders in the Holy Land to reinforce the message that religious leaders in Israel and
Palestine are committed to a serious peace process. They agreed upon a six-point plan to
use their positions of leadership “to prevent religion being used as a source of conflict,
and to serve the goals of a just and comprehensive peace and reconciliation.”
The civil disobedience of Buddhist
monks in Burma (Myanmar) dramatically
illustrated how religion
could motivate the promotion of
human rights and peace.
Rabbi Froman has reached across the typical lines of religious and ethnic division to
communicate with Hamas. When Hamas leader Sheikh Ahmed Yassin (who was killed in
2004) was incarcerated in an Israeli prison, Froman visited him frequently, and the two
men formed a bond due to their shared religiosity despite their adherence to different
traditions. Before Yasser Arafat’s death, Froman regularly visited his offices in Ramallah
carrying messages between him and the Israeli government. With Hamas’s rise to power in
Gaza, Froman has contacted the new leadership and offered to establish lines of communication
between Hamas and the Israelis, an offer that the Israelis have not yet taken up.
For the past five years the Institute also has partnered with a remarkable pair of religious
peacemakers in Nigeria, the Reverend James Wuye and Imam Mohammed Ashafa of
the Interfaith Mediation Center. Remarkably, roughly simultaneous epiphanies transformed
the pastor and imam from religious warriors to religious peacemakers. They had been
engaged in the violent struggle between Christians and Muslims in Kaduna, Nigeria before
they committed their lives to turning religious conflict into peace and reconciliation.
Joint activities between the Institute and the Interfaith Mediation Center have included
training for young Nigerian religious leaders in peacemaking techniques; sponsoring a
religious summit for top Muslim and Christian leaders in Nigeria to combat violence during
Nigeria’s 2007 elections; and efforts to establish a strong interfaith council in Nigeria
that includes Christian and Muslim leaders. Their work brought peace mediations to two
different parts of Plateau State, where thousands have died in fighting between Christians
and Muslims. In Yelwa-Nshar, where over 1,000 villagers were slaughtered in May 2004,
the pastor, imam, and author of this paper successfully mediated a peace agreement that
ended violence and resulted in a compact to promote reconciliation and the resolution of
contentious issues between Christians and Muslims. The peacemaking methodology drew
from Western conflict-resolution techniques as well as traditional Nigerian approaches,
but religious components were also central. These included using scripture, with both
pastor and imam quoting both the Bible and the Quran, along with exhortation based on
religious principles. In 2008 the Institute will assist the pastor and imam as they travel
to other African countries to share their peacemaking methodologies with religious peacemakers
in those countries. In addition the Institute will finance the production of a DVD
illustrating these methodologies so that prospective peacemakers in Africa and beyond
can benefit from the successes that the pastor and imam have achieved.
In Sudan, Christian-Muslim relations remain tense despite the Comprehensive Peace
Agreement signed in 2005 to end the north-south war. With assistance from the Institute,
the Sudan Inter Religious Council (SIRC), our partner organization in Sudan, has organized
high-level meetings between Muslim and Christian leaders. It also has established local
interfaith peace committees where Sudan faces its most volatile intergroup relations. In
2008, SIRC will focus on strengthening interfaith peace committees in Darfur, where the
tensions are most acute.
In 2005, the Institute, along with Catholic University and the International Center for
Religion and Diplomacy, cohosted a visit by a delegation of nine religious leaders from
Iran, including seven Muslims, one Christian, and one Jew. A week of meetings with U.S.
religious and secular leaders opened up deeper understanding between the Iranians and
Americans. As the week progressed, it became evident that the Iranians were much more
comfortable discussing sensitive issues with Americans when the discussions took place in
a religious context. The Iranian delegation refused to visit congressional offices to meet
with members of Congress, but when a meeting was relocated to a townhouse owned by
the National Prayer Breakfast, the Iranians did not hesitate to meet with several members
of the House and the Senate, where they discussed some of the most divisive issues that
make U.S.-Iran relations so conflicted.
Building on this insight, the Institute decided to send a delegation of American Muslim
specialists on Islamic peacemaking to Iran to meet with their Iranian counterparts. This
trip, organized by the Salaam Institute, took place in October 2007. Members of the delegation
gained valuable insights into Iranian society and Iran’s intellectual and religious
life. Doors were opened to them because they were Muslims and their Iranian counterparts
were enormously grateful for the visit. They were fascinated to be able to relate to
religious brethren and to learn that Islam thrives in the United States. The Institute and
the Salaam Institute plan to invite a return delegation of Iranian specialists on Islamic
peacemaking to the United States in 2008.
The Institute’s partner working in the religious realm in Iraq is Canon Andrew White
of FRRME. After helping to found the interfaith Iraqi Institute of Peace in Baghdad with
Institute support and partnership, White helped organize the Iraqi Inter-Religious Congress
(IIRC). In 2007 the IIRC brought together a cross section of high-level Sunni, Shiite,
and Christian leaders who committed themselves to promoting peace in Iraq. After meetings
held between Sunni clerics and advisers to Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, a delegation
of Sunni clerics met with the ayatollah in November 2007. Following that meeting Sistani
issued a fatwa condemning violence against all Iraqis and urged Shiites to make special
effort to protect Sunnis. This breakthrough occurred because the approach was religious
and despite the fact that an Anglican priest was the initiator.
Interfaith Dialogue
Interfaith dialogue is another form of religious peacemaking. Rather than seeking to
resolve a particular conflict, it aims to defuse interfaith tensions that may cause future
conflict or derive from previous conflict. Shortly after September 11, when tensions
worldwide were particularly high between Muslims on one side and Christians and Jews
on the other, the Institute, focusing on the United States and Europe, organized a series
of interfaith dialogues to generate lessons about how to defuse interfaith tensions.
These lessons are summarized in Building Interreligious Trust in a Climate of Fear: An
Abrahamic Trialogue.4 This report was followed by an edited volume, Interfaith Dialogue
and Peacebuilding,5 which drew on cases from the Balkans, Northern Ireland, the Middle
East, and elsewhere to extract lessons about how to conduct effective interfaith dialogue.
The Institute will soon offer an online course about interfaith dialogue on its Web site.
Other Institute publications have provided guidance about how to evaluate the success
of interfaith dialogue6 and how a religious community can learn about the faiths of other
religious communities in educational institutions.7
The Union for Reform Judaism and the Islamic Society of North American recently cooperated
to produce curriculum material for Jewish-Muslim dialogue. The program, entitled
The Children of Abraham: Jews and Muslims in Conversation, addresses scripture, theology,
ethical principles, and diversity within the two traditions. The material also addresses sensitive
issues at the heart of disputes between the global Jewish and Muslim communities,
including the status of Jerusalem, Islamophobia, and anti-Semitism.8
In 2007, 138 Muslim scholars, clerics, and intellectuals gathered in Amman, Jordan,
and issued “A Common Word Between Us and You,” a statement that declared common
ground between Christianity and Islam. The signatories to this message came from every
denomination and school of thought in Islam. Every major Islamic country or region in
the world also was represented in this message. The declaration cites scriptural parallels
between the two faiths and the many similarities in their core teachings. A large group of
Christian scholars and clergy signed a response prepared at Yale Divinity School expressing
appreciation for the Muslim declaration and concurring with its central assertions. The
Vatican also issued a positive response and invited some of the Muslim signatories to meet
with the Pope.9 This exchange underscored what is so often forgotten in these times of
Christian-Muslim tension, namely, the similarities between the two faiths.
Unity in Diversity: Interfaith Dialogue in the Middle East, published recently by the
Institute’s press,10 demonstrates that interfaith dialogue is an expanding enterprise even
where interreligious tensions are the greatest, as in Israel-Palestine, Lebanon, and Egypt.
The research findings also demonstrate the extent to which interfaith dialogue needs to be
Interfaith dialogue is an expanding
enterprise even where interreligious
tensions are the greatest.
tailored to the particular religious and political context in which it is occurring. One particularly
sensitive issue in the Israeli-Palestinian context is the asymmetry of power among
the Jewish, Muslim, and Christian communities and the need to ensure that Palestinian
participants play an equal role to Jews in the conception, organization, and implementation
of an interfaith dialogue process.
Not infrequently the most contentious interfaith relationships can turn out to have
the most meaningful and productive exchanges. In 2005 the embassy of Saudi Arabia
asked the Institute to host five Muslim scholars from Saudi Arabia for a week of religious
discussions in Washington. The Institute accepted on the condition that it fully controlled
whom the Saudis would meet and what the agendas for the discussions would be. One day
was devoted to meeting with Muslim counterparts, another day to meeting with Christian
clergy and theologians, and a third day to meeting with Jewish leaders, primarily orthodox
rabbis. By far the most productive meeting was that held between the Saudis and the
Jewish leaders. Unlike the Christians and the Muslims, who principally sought to establish
their common humanity with the Saudis, the Jewish leaders and Saudi scholars addressed
the tough issues. The Jewish leaders asked the Saudis if they could accept the existence
of a Jewish state in the Middle East. The Saudis in return wanted to know if they could be
critical of the policies of Israel without being accused of anti-Semitism. Each side spoke
to the other with firmness and respect, and an atmosphere of civility prevailed, enabling
the participants to address the issues honestly and forthrightly.
U.S. Government Neglect of the Religious Dimension
Given the importance of religion as both a source of international conflict and a resource
for peacemaking, it is regrettable that the U.S. government is so ill equipped to handle
religious issues and relate to religious actors. An act of Congress in 1998 authorized the
establishment of both the Office of Religious Freedom in the State Department and the
U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom. As a result, religious freedom is a
significant issue on the U.S. foreign policy agenda. But religious conflict and religious
peacemaking are too frequently neglected. Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright
addresses this issue in her recent book,11 noting the shortcomings of the Clinton administration
along with all other U.S. administrations in understanding and addressing religious
factors. She recommends that all foreign-service officers be trained in relevant religious
subjects and that specialists on religion be posted to U.S. embassies abroad.
A report published in 2007 by the Center for Strategic and International Studies echoes
Albright’s points.12 The report concludes that
These and other analysts argue that if the U.S. government is to insert itself into
international conflicts or build deeper and more productive relationships with countries
around the world, it needs a better strategy to engage effectively and respectfully with
the religious realm. As September 11 and the current situation in Iraq attest, failure to
understand religious motivations and interpretations of political situations is ultimately
to our nation’s detriment. As has increasingly been learned in Iraq, however, engaging
religious leaders can create tangible and positive results that contribute to peace and
global security.
Not infrequently the most contentious
interfaith relationships can turn out
to have the most meaningful and productive
exchanges.
U.S. government officials are often reluctant to address the issue of religion, whether in
response to a secular U.S. legal and political tradition, in the context of America’s Judeo-Christian
image overseas, or simply because religion is perceived as too complicated or sensitive….
Current U.S. government frameworks for approaching religion are narrow, often because they
approach religions as problematic or monolithic forces, overemphasize a terrorism-focused analysis
of Islam, or marginalize religion as a peripheral humanitarian or cultural issue…. Institutional
capacity to understand and approach religion is limited due to legal limitations, lack of religious
expertise or training, minimal influence for religion-related initiatives, and a government primarily
structured to engage with other official state actors.13
Engaging religious leaders can
create tangible and positive
results that contribute to peace
and global security.
Conclusion
In June 2007, reflecting a growing international awareness of the past neglect of religion,
Sheikha Haya Rashed Al Khalifa, the president of the United Nations General Assembly,
stated that “promoting a true dialogue among civilizations and religions is perhaps the
most important political instrument that we can use to reach out across borders and build
bridges of peace and hope.”14
This report has sought to demonstrate the nature of the religious dimension of international
conflict, which is sometimes neglected, often misunderstood, and frequently exaggerated.
It has also illustrated how religious leaders have addressed conflict and injustices
confronting their societies. In addition, religious leaders have employed a variety of
peacemaking techniques, ranging from mediation and facilitation to interfaith dialogue,
to address conflict around the globe and make the world a more peaceful place.
Notes
1. “In God’s Name,” The Economist, November 1, 2007.
2. David R. Smock, ed., Religious Contributions to Peacemaking: When Religion Brings Peace, Not War,
USIP Peaceworks no. 55 (Washington, DC: United States Institute of Peace, 2006), 17.
3. Douglas Johnston, “The Religious Dimension,” unpublished paper, n.d., 3, based upon Johnston, ed.
Trumping Realpolitik: Faith-Based Diplomacy (New York: Oxford University Press, 2003).
4. Special Report 99 (Washington, DC: United States Institute of Peace Press, 2003).
5. David Smock, ed. (Washington, DC: United States Institute of Peace Press, 2007).
6. Renee Garfinkel, What Works? Evaluating Interfaith Dialogue Programs, Special Report 123 (Washington,
DC: United States Institute of Peace Press, 2004).
7. David Smock, Teaching about the Religious Other, Special Report 143 (Washington, DC: United States
Institute of Peace Press, 2005).
8. Union for Reform Judaism, URJ–Muslim Dialogue, available at http://urj.org/muslimdialogue/
(accessed January 15, 2008).
9. The original letter and the responses can be read at A Common Word, available at www.acommonword.
com (accessed January 15, 2008).
10. Mohammed Abu-Nimer, Emily Welty, and Amal I. Khoury, Unity in Diversity: Interfaith Dialogue in the
Middle East (Washington, DC: United States Institute of Peace Press, 2007).
11. Madeleine Albright, The Mighty and the Almighty (New York: HarperCollins, 2006).
12. Liora Danan and Alice Hunt, Mixed Blessings: U.S. Government Engagement with Religion in Conflict-
Prone Settings (Washington, DC: Center for Strategic and International Studies, 2007). Available at www.
csis.org/media/csis/pubs/070820_religion.pdf (accessed January 19, 2008).
13. Danan and Hunt, Mixed Blessings, 3.
14. United Nations press release, June 13, 2007.
United States
Institute of Peace
1200 17th Street NW
Washington, DC 20036
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