Hier eine "Papieraufruf" für eine Konferenz im niederländischen Leiden:
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Call for Papers
"The Root Causes of Terrorism: A Religious Studies Perspective"
Interdisciplinary Conference,
Institute for Religious Studies, Leiden University
Leiden (Netherlands)
18-19 May 2011
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Nine years after the event of the September 11th and the global war on terror, bombs are still blasted and innocent people are being killed under the banner of terrorism. Most of these sinisterly threatening events are motivated by religious claims, or are taken place in religiously affected places. Is religion the main cause of terrorism, or does terrorism still arise because of leaders who brainwash and coach future terrorists so that they kill under the banner of religion? Religious imagination seems to hold here an influential power in the creation of ‘delusion’ to orient the ‘bigot’ believers toward the fulfilling of their religious duty against those who are religious in a different way or not religious at all. Religion, in this sense, is tightly allied with political aspirations as it can be seen in most of the current instances.
In spite of sacred pretexts justifying acts of killing, more ‘enlightened’ religious leaders and religious minded people believe and argue that religion is a source of peace and mercy. For them, the sacred texts must be read from a ‘humanist’ perspective because the whole religion is ultimately, so they claim, about human beings who are all equal and created by the same God. This is the attitude of many religious people today, i.e. that God is merciful and compassionate, and the religious tradition thus praised would never allow religious hatred, intolerance, and resentment. Nor do scriptures provide any rationale, so they say, for one-sided and serf-serving interpretations or interpretations that promote aggression against others. If religion falls short, they continue, of mercy, compassion, and peace, it falls into ideological dogma and stoned-headedness. Therefore, those interpretations that justify aggression and acts of killing are the shallow and purposeful readings of the religious texts aiming at political intentions, so more benevolent advocates of religions might plead.
Whatever reading of religious traditions one might advocate, it cannot be denied that in practice, religion and ‘violence’ often are closely associated. The central question of this conference is what a religious studies perspective (rather than that of a religious advocate or representative) can contribute to the deep links between
religion and terrorism.
Scholars of philosophy, theology, social and political sciences, and other relevant disciplines, are invited to participate. Pending on financial approval a selection of the conference contributions will be published in a volume with the working title: The Root Causes of Terrorism: A Religious Studies Perspective. Otherwise the accepted
papers will be published on the conference website as conference proceedings.
Keynote speakers:
Prof. Nitzan Leibovic
Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania
Apter Chair for Holocaust and Ethical Values
Dr. Wim Hofstee
Leiden University, Institute for Religious Studies
Comparative Religion & Anthropology of Religion
Dr. Christoph Baumgartner
Utrecht University, Department of Religious Studies and Theology
Ethics
Prof. Bassam Tibi
Universität Goettingen
Conference Themes (Tentatively suggested);
Conference topics of interest include, but are not limited to the
following parts:
Part One: Religions and non-violence (ahimsa etc.)
All major religions have tenacious traditions of non-violence, however distorted these might have become through religious practices throughout history. How do these non-violent traditions relate to the violence justified by other adherents of the same religions?
Part Two: Violence and Liminal Experiences in Religion
Religions usually demarcate crucial (‘liminal’) events in the life of their adherents. So-called ‘primitiveadulthood enhancing ‘violent’ activities, perpetrated both by the initiators and those to be initiated in tribal life. Perhaps religious customs such as
circumcision and baptism are domesticated and mitigated remnants of these violent activities. Is liminality in religion a possible root of violent behaviour?
Part Three: Violence and Sacrifice
There is no religion without sacrifice. Does very concept of religion itself, relating a this-worldy orientation to another-worldly, entail some kind of sacrificial practice, differing only in degree as to its ‘violent’ accomplishment?
Part Four: Violence and Apocalypticism
Monotheistic traditions have introduced a new notion of ‘time’ and henceforth, of ‘history’. They all contain ideas about apocalyptic violence inaugurating the end of history and the definitive realisation of a divine kingdom. How ‘active’ are these apocalyptic ideas within different religions? Do they form an undercurrent that
can erupt at any moment?
Part Five: Religious Wars
Among the many wars and combats in this world, some of them have been explicitly motivated by religious urges. How did (do) these urges afflict the concrete warfare? Are religious wars worse than economic or political wars? Can these be distinguished?
To contribute please send an abstract, maximum length of 250 words
and a short biography (approximately 150 words), no later than December 31st, 2010 to the organizers of the conference. The Editorial Committee reviews the proposals and will respond to submitters by the end of January 2011.
Organizers:
Dr. Rico Sneller
Assistant professor of Ethics and History of Philosophy
Institute for Religious Studies
Leiden University
Phone: +31 71 527 2583
h.w.sneller@hum.leidenuniv.nl
Dr. W. Hofstee
Assistant professor of Comparative Religion
Institute for Religious Studies
Leiden University
Phone: +31 71 527 2630
w.hofstee@religion.leidenuniv.nl
Dr. Jalil Roshandel
Associate professor
Director, Security Studies
East Carolina University
Brewster A - 116
Greenville, NC 27858-4353
Phone: +1 1 252 328 1062
RoshandelJ@ecu.edu
Dr. Mahmoud Masaeli
Professor of Ethics and International Relations
Faculty of Philosophy, Saint Paul University, Ottawa
President, Global Solutions Praxis
2028 Belcourt Blvd.
Ottawa, ON K1C 1M6
Phone: +1 613 818 4726
mmasaeli@ustpaul.ca
president@global-solutions-praxis.ca