Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 April 2015
1. Johnston, Doug & Sampson, Cynthia, Religion, the Missing Dimension of Statecraft (Oxford U. Press 1994)Google Scholar; Appleby, Scott, The Ambivalence of the Sacred: Religion, Violence, and Reconciliation (Rowman & Littlefield 2000)Google Scholar.
2. In most of the interfaith dialogue groups that I have led in the last 15 years (Sri Lanka, Palestine-Israel, Egypt, the Philippines, Bosnia, and the U.S.), participants were reluctant to speak about or even consider the thought of exploring this aspect of their faiths' tradition, especially in the initial phases of their dialogue. However, the deeper they delved into their own faith, and as an outcome of continuing dialogue, the more daring they became in uncovering how even their “true religious rituals” have contributed to exclusion and prejudice. (Further discussion of these dynamics of interfaith dialogue and religious peacebuilding can be found in Abu-Nimer, Mohammed, Khoury, Amai & Welty, Emily, Unity in Diversity: Interfaith Dialogue in the Middle East (U.S. Inst. Peace Press 2007)Google Scholar).
3. Huda, Qamar-ul, The 40th Anniversary Of Vatican II: examining Dominus Iesus, and contemporary issues for inter-religious dialogue between Muslims and Catholics, 15 Islam & Christian-Muslim Rel. 331–347 (2004)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.