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CREATED:20060311T130300Z
DESCRIPTION:http://www.zaytuna.org/eventDetails.asp?id=60  
 --------------------------------------------------------  An evening of 
 conversation with   CHRIS HEDGES (Pulitzer-Prize winning NY Times War 
 Correspondent)  &  HAMZA YUSUF (Prominent American Muslim Theologian)  
 --------------------------------------------------------  Have the teachers 
 of our religions failed us? Or have we not been listening? From leaders of 
 America's Christian Right seemingly forgetting that "Blessed are the 
 Peacemakers," to Jewish rabbis watching unflinchingly as collective 
 punishment is doled out to Arabs in Palestine, to Muslim jurists ruling 
 that civilian victims are acceptable under a Just War, the three great 
 Abrahamic faiths are increasingly facing accusations of ignoring the 
 sanctity of life. Some, pointing perhaps to Malcolm X when he famously 
 advised a group of black nationalists to, "Leave your religion at home," 
 are not surprised, believing religion is best at dividing, not uniting; 
 others argue, often just as persuasively, that this new penchant the 
 religious have for the immediacy of violent solutions is bred from ideas 
 other than those rooted in sound religious tradition. The same Malcolm X, 
 after all, boldly argued from Mecca that only a belief in the Oneness of 
 God could harmonize a discordant America. Can our current leaders-and some 
 of us-achieve a similar understanding?  And so, does religion offer a way 
 toward reconciliation? Or has it instead become part of the problem? Please 
 join us for an enlightening conversation between two teachers worth 
 listening to: Pulitzer Prize-winner and National Book Award-finalist Chris 
 Hedges and the distinguished American-Muslim thinker and theologian, Hamza 
 Yusuf.      CHRIS HEDGES  Chris Hedges is a reporter for The New York Times 
 and has spent 15 years covering crises in many conflict-ridden locations 
 including El Salvador, Nicaragua, Algeria, the West Bank and the Gaza 
 Strip, Iraq, Sarajevo and Kosovo. His debut book, War Is a Force That Gives 
 Us Meaning, has been reviewed by the Times,The Washington Post, The Los 
 Angeles Times, and is a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle 
 Award. Hedges has also appeared on a variety of radio and television 
 programs such as "Charlie Rose," "The News Hour," "CBS Sunday Morning," 
 "Fresh Air," "Talk of the Nation," CNN and PBS's "Religion and Ethics." He 
 has lectured at numerous colleges and institutions including Harvard, Yale, 
 Columbia, University of California at Berkeley, The Council on Foreign 
 Relations, Bates College, New York University and Colgate University.  In 
 War Is a Force That Gives Us Meaning, Hedges addresses humanity's love 
 affair with war, offering a moving and thought-provoking perspective on the 
 subject. He draws on the literature of combat, from Homer and Shakespeare, 
 Erich Maria Remarque and Michael Herr. Hedges cautions that even for the 
 winners, war unleashes unforeseen consequences. At a time when the US is 
 girding itself for yet another military showdown, the message of this book 
 is particularly timely.  Hedges holds a BA in English literature from 
 Colgate University, a master of divinity from Harvard Divinity School where 
 he was a Neiman Fellow, and taught at Columbia University. He then went on 
 to teach at Princeton University in the fall of 2003.  Hedges was the 
 Central American Bureau Chief for the Dallas Morning News and later the 
 Middle East Bureau Chief for that newspaper, based in Jerusalem, from 1988 
 to 1990. He was the Middle East Bureau Chief for The New York Times, based 
 in Cairo, from 1991 to 1995 and later the Balkans Bureau Chief for the 
 Times from 1995 to 1998. He was a member of The New York Times team that 
 won the 2002 Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Reporting for the paper's 
 coverage of global terrorism and he received the 2002 Amnesty International 
 Global Award for Human Rights Journalism. In 2005, Hedges published Losing 
 Moses on the Freeway: The Ten Commandments in America.  Source: American 
 Program Bureau      HAMZA YUSUF  Hamza Yusuf is regarded as one of the 
 foremost Muslim thinkers and theologians in the English-speaking world. 
 Hamza Yusuf’s story is of both the East and the West, of both Islam and 
 America. Born in southern Washington state and named after a Shakespearean 
 scholar, Yusuf became a Muslim in 1977. The son of a humanities professor 
 and a civil rights activist, he enjoyed an intellectually nurturing 
 upbringing and, soon after accepting Islam, embarked upon a search for 
 knowledge that would introduce him to the East. That search has led him to 
 take seriously the saying, “Blessed are the Peacemakers,” and, since 
 September 11, 2001, he has spent more than half his time away from home in 
 an effort to foster meaningful dialogue between the East and the West.  As 
 a new Muslim, Yusuf stayed briefly in England, then moved to the United 
 Arab Emirates for four years, and on to Saudi Arabia as well as North and 
 West Africa to pursue instruction in the various disciplines of Islam. He 
 immersed himself in the study of classical Arabic, Qur’anic exegesis, 
 jurisprudence, the traditions of the Prophet, theology and spiritual 
 psychology. He has been granted teaching licenses in several of Islam’s 
 disciplines. After more than a decade in the East, Yusuf returned to the 
 United States in 1998 and co-founded the Zaytuna Institute to help revive 
 the traditional Islamic sciences. Zaytuna, located in Hayward, California, 
 has rapidly established an international reputation for presenting a 
 classical picture of Islam in the West.  Widely admired for a fluid 
 familiarity with scholarship from both the East and the West, Yusuf has 
 delivered lectures at some of the world’s most prominent universities. 
 The first American lecturer to teach in Morocco's oldest university, the 
 venerable Kairoiuin in Fes, he has also been a guest of Morocco's King 
 Hasan II and now of his son, King Muhammad VI, for the last several years 
 at the Ramadan Lectures. He has translated into modern English several 
 classical Arabic texts and poems, including the newest rendering of the 
 13th century devotional poem, the Burda, or The Poem of the Cloak. Most 
 recently, he published Purification of the Heart, a translation and 
 commentary of Imam al-Mawlud’s Matharat al-Qulub, a nineteenth century 
 text that examines the conditions and treatments of the spiritual heart.  
 Since September 11th, Yusuf has advised the President of the United States, 
 addressed the House of Lords and the Welsh Assembly in the United Kingdom, 
 and counseled the Secretary General of the Arab League and several Arab 
 foreign ministers. He was invited to represent American Muslims at the 2001 
 Muslim-Christian Summit hosted by the Community of Sant’Egidio in Rome. 
 He has written numerous editorials and essays and has also appeared on 
 several national and international media outlets as an outspoken advocate 
 for a better understanding between the Muslim East and the modern West.   
 Hamza Yusuf currently resides in Northern California with his wife and 
 children.  Source: Zaytuna Institute  Safir Ahmed (Moderator) is a 
 long-time journalist and editor. He began his career at the 
 Pulitzer-family-owned daily newspaper in St. Louis, Missouri, where he was 
 first a reporter and then a metro editor. He went on to edit that city’s 
 national-award-winning weekly newspaper for 11 years. He has been the 
 Editorial Chair of the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies and the Vice 
 President of the Independent Media Institute. For more than a decade, he 
 was moderator of a cable television program on international news, where he 
 moderated discussions between guest experts. He has directed communications 
 for a U.S. Senate campaign. He was most recently the editor of AlterNet, a 
 major national online newsmagazine, and currently serves as a book editor 
 for Chelsea Green Publishing, an independent publishing house.  Driving 
 Directions:  - Off of highway 80/580 take the University Avenue exit to 
 Berkeley.  - Go East on University Avenue toward UC Berkeley.  - Turn left 
 at Martin Luther King Jr. Way.  - Turn left on Rose Street.  - School is on 
 the right side. (Turn right on Cedar St. for free parking behind the 
 school.)  Public Transportation Directions:  - Take the BART 
 (http://www.bart.gov) to the Downtown Berkeley Exit.  - Go to the 
 South-East corner of Center Street & Shattuck Avenue. Board the AC Transit 
 Bus #43.  $1.75 Fare. (Runs every 20 minutes, at HH:06, HH:26 and HH:46)  - 
 Depart the bus at the corner of Shattuck Place & Rose Street.  - Walk West 
 on Rose Street approximately 5 blocks and arrive at the MLK Jr. Middle 
 School. (1781 Rose Street)  - Enter on the Grant Street Entrance. 
 (wheelchair accessible)  For more information:  Web: 
 http://www.zaytuna.org/eventDetails.asp?id=60  Phone: (510) 582-1979  
 Email: info@zaytuna.org\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2006/03/11/91383.php
SUMMARY:DOES GOD LOVE WAR?: The Fine Line Between Faith and Fanaticism
LOCATION:Martin Luther King Jr Middle School Auditorium  1781 Rose Street / 
 Berkeley, CA 94704/ Free off-street parking
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2006/03/11/91383.php
DTSTART:20060312T030000Z
DTEND:20060312T060000Z
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