An international group of Muslim leaders has sent a letter to the worldÂ’s Jewish community appealing for better relationships between the faiths, according to a report in the Telegraph on Tuesday.
“Many Jews and Muslims today stand apart from each other due to feelings of anger, which in some parts of the world translates into violence. It is our contention that we are faced today not with ‘a clash of civilisations’ but with ‘a clash of ill-informed misunderstandings’.” | The unprecedented letter, which is being seen as a significant gesture of reconciliation, said: “Many Jews and Muslims today stand apart from each other due to feelings of anger, which in some parts of the world translates into violence. It is our contention that we are faced today not with ‘a clash of civilisations’ but with ‘a clash of ill-informed misunderstandings’.”
Signatories of the letter include Professor Akbar Ahmed, a former Pakistan high commissioner to Great Britain, who also signed a similar statement earlier this year from Muslim scholars to Christian leaders around the world.
The new letter said: “Deep-seated stereotypes and prejudices have resulted in a distancing of the communities and even a dehumanising of the ‘Other’. We urgently need to address this situation. We must strive towards turning ignorance into knowledge, intolerance into understanding, and pain into courage and sensitivity for the ‘Other’.”
It added: “There is more in common between our religions and peoples than is known to each of us. It is precisely due to the urgent need to address such political problems as well as acknowledge our shared values that the establishment of an inter-religious dialogue between Jews and Muslims in our time is extremely important. |