Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 288
Trim: 6⅜ x 9¼
978-0-7425-5066-7 • Hardback • March 2006 • $135.00 • (£104.00)
978-0-7425-5067-4 • Paperback • March 2006 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
978-0-7425-7226-3 • eBook • March 2006 • $47.00 • (£36.00)
Eboo Patel is the Founder and Executive Director of the
Interfaith Youth Core, a Chicago-based international organization that brings young people from different faith communities together to build understanding and cooperation. He earned his doctorate in the Sociology of Religion from the University of Oxford, where he studied on a Rhodes Scholarship. Patel is a regular guest on Chicago Public Radio and a frequent contributor to the Op-Ed pages of The Chicago Tribune. Additionally, he has written for The Harvard Divinity School Bulletin, Utne Magazine, The Journal of Muslim Law and Culture and National Public Radio. He serves on the Boards of the International Interfaith Center, CrossCurrents Magazine and Duke University's Islamic Studies Center. Patel has been featured in a range of media, including The New Republic, NPR, the BBC, and CNN. He is a sought-after speaker, and his addresses include the keynote speech at the Nobel Peace Prize Forum with President Jimmy Carter and the Baccalaureate Service Address at the University of Pennsylvania. Patel is an Ashoka Fellow, part of an elite network of social entrepreneurs with ideas that have the potential to change the world. Patrice Brodeur has recently been appointed Canada Research Chair on Islam, Pluralism,and Globalization at the University of Montreal in the Faculty of Theology and the Science of Religions. Born in Canada and educated in Israel and Jordan, he obtained his Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1999. He has published on a variety of mostly contemporary subjects in Islamic and Religious Studies, from theory to applied religion. He has been active internationally in the field of interreligious dialogue and has begun articulating theoretical implications for the interdisciplinary academic study of religion. He was a fellow at the Center for the Study of World Religions at Harvard University (1997D1998) and received a summer National Endowment for the Humanities grant to study Islam at the Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding at Georgetown University (1999).
Chapter 1 Acknowledgements
Chapter 2 Preface
Chapter 3 Introduction
Part 4 CONTEXTS OF INTERFAITH YOUTH WORK
Chapter 5 Affirming Identity, Acheiving Pluralism
Chapter 6 Young Adult Development, Religious Identity, and Interreligious Solidarity in an Interfaith Learning Community
Chapter 7 Theologies of Interreligious Encounters and Their Relevance to Youth
Part 8 INTERNATIONAL INTERFAITH ORGANIZATIONS
Chapter 9 Towards a Transnational Interfaith Youth Network in Higher Education
Chapter 10 The Gujarat Young Adult Project of the International Association for Religious Freedom (IARF)
Chapter 11 Youth Leadership
Chapter 12 The Next Generation
Part 13 HIGHER EDUCATION
Chapter 14 Youth and the Pluralism Project
Chapter 15 Seminarians Interacting
Chapter 16 Towards a Multifaith Community at Wellesley College
Chapter 17 Bringing Interfaith to the University of Illinois
Chapter 18 Ariculating What is at Stake in Interreligious Work
Part 19 SECONDARY EDUCATION
Chapter 20 Teaching World Religions
Chapter 21 Secondary School Teacher Training in Religious Studies
Chapter 22 Training Teachers in American Religious Diversity
Part 23 COMMUNITY-BASED PROJECTS
Chapter 24 The Interfaith Youth Core
Chapter 25 Interfaith Youth Leadership Council of the Interfaith Ministries for Greater Houston
Chapter 26 The High School Youth Program of the Interfaith Conference of Metropolitan Washington
Chapter 27 The Sacred Stories of the Ghetto Film School
Part 28 IMMERSION PROJECTS
Chapter 29 Spirit into Action
Chapter 30 E Pluribus Union
Chapter 31 The Chicago Interfaith Service House
Chapter 32 Face to Face/Faith to Faith
Part 33 PASTORAL WORK
Chapter 34 Ask Pastor Paul
Chapter 35 Conclusion
Chapter 36 Epilogue
Chapter 37 Index
Chapter 38 About the Contributors
Those working in higher education, or with similar aged youth, will find this volume a valuable resource across campus divisions: administrators in preparing mission and strategic planning, faculty in the classroom, administrators in student affairs, and chaplains in campus ministry offices to name a few. Perhaps [this book can be] most effectively used as a reference book for working groups exploring ways to foster interfaith action.
— Collegium: A Colloquy of Faith and Intellectual Life
This is a truly 21st century story that focuses on a new set of movements for social change that are bringing together young people across lines of faith for the work they can do on behalf of all of us. Readers will find programs to emulate, understandings that will sharpen their thinking and tremendous encouragement to add their thoughts to this emerging dialog.
— Ruth Messinger; President, American Jewish World Service
This collection of essays is...to be welcomed....Many of the principles that can be drawn out of them...have universal relevance and can be seen in other initiatives around the globe.
— Elizabeth J. Harris; Journal of Contemporary Religion
With the publication of their breathtakingly comprehensive and creative profile of the emergent interfaith youth movement, Patrice Brodeur and Eboo Patel have both disclosed and helped to create an increasingly coherent social force that exemplifies what Brodeur calls "the global"—the unfolding of global dynamics in local communities. This volume, glistening with new ideas and energies, gathers one innovative voice after another—27 in all—to provide vivid testimony to the progress and potential of various initiatives that can eventually produce a truly transnational youth movement. The world will be the better for the empowerment of religiously alert, tolerant young people who welcome diversity and pluralism as an opportunity rather than a threat.
— R Scott Appleby, Institute for International Peace Studies, Professor of History, University of Notre Dame