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From Middletown to the Middle East

~ Reflections on travel and teaching

From Middletown to the Middle East

Monthly Archives: July 2012

Aurora and Bulgaria killings: both the result of morally and politically complex forces

26 Thursday Jul 2012

Posted by tgilheany in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

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Alison Kaplan Sommer, Aurora Colorado, Bulgaria, chosenness, contingency, cultural essentialism, Individualism, moral clarity

Flying from Israel to the U.S. does *not* bring one from a place of greater meaning to one of lesser meaning.

Allison Kaplan Sommer and I have had many of the same thoughts recently. Ms. Sommer wrote a well-written and heartfelt blog for the Israeli newspaper Ha’aretz about the killings in Aurora, Colorado and Bulgaria. She and I share a strong feeling of privilege that we can choose to travel or live in places where we are (at least ostensibly) safer than other people about whom we care. We both have had the disorienting experience of receiving tragic news from abroad while surrounded by the quotidian pleasures of a vacation spot. More generally, I would strongly recommend reading her posts; my recent favorite is this portrait of Peter Beinart.

I would respectfully disagree with Ms. Sommer’s thesis, however, that “senseless violence can happen; at least in Israel we know why.” As an Israeli, she argues (while anticipating my counterargument), “I found that the essential difference between our [Israeli] experience and theirs [U.S.] is that we know why it happened. We may argue over how it would be prevented, the political decision that one side or the other could make such attacks more or less frequent. But essentially, we know why.”

It is that “essentially” where we part ways. I see nothing essential in the current hostility between Iran and Israel. Most importantly (and I don’t claim that Ms. Sommer meant to imply this) I do not see it as a necessary outcropping of an existential battle between Israel and the Muslim world. I would argue the Bulgaria bombing is the direct result of specific choices on the part of less and more religious Iranian and Israeli politicians playing the nationalist card with their constituencies in order to gain more power. If both countries were more cosmopolitan and less nationalist they could have avoided this tragedy. One may or may not agree with my assessment, but that is the point. To some extent we “know why,” but the why is complex and something about which we can and will disagree.

In the U.S., violence involves different but just as unclear, debatable and dependent political and social issues. Again, Ms. Sommer correctly anticipates my counterargument. “With an event like the Colorado shooting, there is the senselessness to deal with. Americans can argue, of course, whether tougher gun laws would or would not have prevented a smart guy like James Holmes from his destructive mission. But the essential ‘why’ lies not in the public sphere but in the twisted psyche of the killer.”

Again, the word “essential” defines our difference. I see nothing essential in the killer’s unidentified and untreated mental state or his access to firearms. I would argue the Aurora shooting is the direct result of specific choices on the part of more or less individualist U.S. politicians playing the gun rights and tax cuts cards with their constituencies in order to gain more power. If the U.S. would move away from the individualist side of the spectrum and toward a sense that “we must all hang together, or assuredly we shall all hang separately,” we could impose stricter gun control laws and support mental illness screening and care. Again, one may or may not agree with my assessment, but that is the point. Again, to some extent we “know why,” but the why is complex and something about which we can and will disagree.

Israel is not a zone of special moral clarity defined by a single existential battle, nor is the U.S. a zone lacking transcendent meaning, in which good and bad only exists inside the mental states of individuals. Both countries are complex societies in which meaning is contingent, people of varying identities can take different roles, and political and social choices can greatly increase or decrease the amount of violence they cause and suffer.

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Help designing Religion and Politics course, please?

25 Wednesday Jul 2012

Posted by tgilheany in Courses

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Arab Spring, course design, course readings, current-events, high school seniors, Israel, middle-east, Palestine, religion and politics, seminar

I am designing a seminar for 14 highly motivated, well-prepared U.S. high school seniors, and I need your help! My initial thoughts:

“Course title: Religion and Politics in the Contemporary World

Course description: How do people’s religious beliefs and practices influence their political beliefs and practices? How to their political views inform their religious commitments? To develop our understandings of how these two powerful forces relate to each other we will look at a series of present-day case studies:

-Religion in the 2012 United States Presidential and national elections

-Religion and the State in contemporary Israel

-the Arab Spring in Egypt

-Secularization and religious diversity in Western Europe

-Religion and the states of contemporary India and Pakistan

-other case studies to be selected as current events warrant”

What other themes should I seek to address? What key questions should be on the table? And most importantly from my perspective in building this class, do you have recommendations for readings? Reading level: New Yorker and Atlantic articles, newspaper articles, Ted talks, scholarly essays with minimal jargon, well-edited historical sources (ie, something from the 17th century can work if it is introduced clearly and edited down to 15-20 pages.) Essentially if it would work for a high-powered college freshman it will work with these guys.

Thanks in advance for your thoughts!

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A most meaningful Fourth of July

05 Thursday Jul 2012

Posted by tgilheany in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

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Benjamin Franklin, Declaration of Independence, enlightenment, Fourth of July, national pride, Richard Rorty, Thomas Jefferson, United States

Waking up on Independence Day

This morning 5:45am found us at the Mill Pond Diner in Wareham, MA. As my cousin commented when he saw my picture on Facebook, “That IS America!” Later we watched the parade in Marion, with the veterans, the fire trucks and the boy and girl scouts. The evening dinner was hot dogs and burgers from the grill. Flags are flying from the many 19th century Cape houses.

Our flag – a symbol, I hope, of expanding circles of inclusion.

It is not the stereotypical nature of our holiday, however, that has made it especially significant for me. Rather, it is how it has underlined my reflections on the nature of our social contract. The Enlightenment value of natural rights that Jefferson and Franklin referred to when they wrote “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal” is central to the way I think we should organize our common life. Of course every other place name here is a reminder of our historical violation of these rights – Massachusetts, Massasoit, Sippican, Mattapoisett, the Old Indian Trail, etc. The ghosts of another people are everywhere, and I admit with shame that usually I hardly recognize them. Our history of slavery, Jim Crow, and the denial of women’s rights also testify to the flawed nature of our understanding of complete human rights. Nonetheless, we have been slowly “achieving our country,” in the words of Richard Rorty. I am deeply grateful to live in a country where we can interpret our central mission as universally inclusive and compassionate.

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