Religious Pluralism and Interfaith Coexistence: Ecumenicalism in the Context of Traditional Modes of Tolerance

In many parts of the developing world, religion is singled out as the cause for violent clashes. At the 2007 TrustAfrica workshop in Dakar, the conference of religious leaders, scholars, and experts from 12 African countries and the Diaspora explored this concern under the theme "Meeting the Ch...

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Main Authors: David Owusu-Ansah, Emmanuel Akyeampong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Ghana 2019-12-01
Series:Legon Journal of the Humanities
Subjects:
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spelling doaj-6e55c7147e0647e3ba3b074dbcc9367b2020-11-25T02:32:38ZengUniversity of GhanaLegon Journal of the Humanities2458-746X2458-746X2019-12-01302118https://dx.doi.org/10.4314/ljh.v30i2.1Religious Pluralism and Interfaith Coexistence: Ecumenicalism in the Context of Traditional Modes of ToleranceDavid Owusu-AnsahEmmanuel AkyeampongIn many parts of the developing world, religion is singled out as the cause for violent clashes. At the 2007 TrustAfrica workshop in Dakar, the conference of religious leaders, scholars, and experts from 12 African countries and the Diaspora explored this concern under the theme "Meeting the Challenges of Religion and Pluralism in Africa." It was observed that religiously justified conflicts were often the repackaging of community concerns regarding issues of social, economic, and political injustices, inequities and exclusions. Consequently, a project on “religious pluralism and interfaith coexistence in Ghana” was funded in 2008 as part of the efforts to examine the role of local traditions as a foundation to interfaith dialogue. Earlier in 2005, a similar project on the theme of Islam and tolerance, with funding from Harvard and Michigan State University, was conducted in Ghana. Several issues emerging from the field conversations are pertinent to topics of how history shaped Muslim relations with their non-Muslim hosts in West Africa. It is often argued in the literature that Islam’s inherently adoptive attitude toward African religious culture made it possible for Muslims and their non-Muslim hosts to co-exist. However, this research contends that, in the case of Ghana, it was the traditional local culture as defined by indigenous religious values that shaped and moderated the environment that sustained peaceful interreligious relations. The authors express concern that as the country experiences rapid urbanization, Westernization, proliferation of charismatic churches and aggressive Christian evangelization, the traditional values that underpinned pluralism and peace in historic times might be threatened (George Bob-Milliar and Karen Lauterback, 2018).traditional cosmologyspiritual knowledgepowerecumenismthe common goodreligious tolerancepluralismsyncretismpeaceful national coexistence
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David Owusu-Ansah
Emmanuel Akyeampong
spellingShingle David Owusu-Ansah
Emmanuel Akyeampong
Religious Pluralism and Interfaith Coexistence: Ecumenicalism in the Context of Traditional Modes of Tolerance
Legon Journal of the Humanities
traditional cosmology
spiritual knowledge
power
ecumenism
the common good
religious tolerance
pluralism
syncretism
peaceful national coexistence
author_facet David Owusu-Ansah
Emmanuel Akyeampong
author_sort David Owusu-Ansah
title Religious Pluralism and Interfaith Coexistence: Ecumenicalism in the Context of Traditional Modes of Tolerance
title_short Religious Pluralism and Interfaith Coexistence: Ecumenicalism in the Context of Traditional Modes of Tolerance
title_full Religious Pluralism and Interfaith Coexistence: Ecumenicalism in the Context of Traditional Modes of Tolerance
title_fullStr Religious Pluralism and Interfaith Coexistence: Ecumenicalism in the Context of Traditional Modes of Tolerance
title_full_unstemmed Religious Pluralism and Interfaith Coexistence: Ecumenicalism in the Context of Traditional Modes of Tolerance
title_sort religious pluralism and interfaith coexistence: ecumenicalism in the context of traditional modes of tolerance
publisher University of Ghana
series Legon Journal of the Humanities
issn 2458-746X
2458-746X
publishDate 2019-12-01
description In many parts of the developing world, religion is singled out as the cause for violent clashes. At the 2007 TrustAfrica workshop in Dakar, the conference of religious leaders, scholars, and experts from 12 African countries and the Diaspora explored this concern under the theme "Meeting the Challenges of Religion and Pluralism in Africa." It was observed that religiously justified conflicts were often the repackaging of community concerns regarding issues of social, economic, and political injustices, inequities and exclusions. Consequently, a project on “religious pluralism and interfaith coexistence in Ghana” was funded in 2008 as part of the efforts to examine the role of local traditions as a foundation to interfaith dialogue. Earlier in 2005, a similar project on the theme of Islam and tolerance, with funding from Harvard and Michigan State University, was conducted in Ghana. Several issues emerging from the field conversations are pertinent to topics of how history shaped Muslim relations with their non-Muslim hosts in West Africa. It is often argued in the literature that Islam’s inherently adoptive attitude toward African religious culture made it possible for Muslims and their non-Muslim hosts to co-exist. However, this research contends that, in the case of Ghana, it was the traditional local culture as defined by indigenous religious values that shaped and moderated the environment that sustained peaceful interreligious relations. The authors express concern that as the country experiences rapid urbanization, Westernization, proliferation of charismatic churches and aggressive Christian evangelization, the traditional values that underpinned pluralism and peace in historic times might be threatened (George Bob-Milliar and Karen Lauterback, 2018).
topic traditional cosmology
spiritual knowledge
power
ecumenism
the common good
religious tolerance
pluralism
syncretism
peaceful national coexistence
work_keys_str_mv AT davidowusuansah religiouspluralismandinterfaithcoexistenceecumenicalisminthecontextoftraditionalmodesoftolerance
AT emmanuelakyeampong religiouspluralismandinterfaithcoexistenceecumenicalisminthecontextoftraditionalmodesoftolerance
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