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Muslim group to hold forum on tolerance, interfaith  relations tonight


Discussion honors Day of Tolerance
By Aaron  Uslan


Published Monday, November 17, 2003
 

The Bloomington Muslim Dialogue Group will hold a forum on the status of interfaith relations at 7 p.m. tonight in the  Frangipani Room in the Indiana Memorial Union.

The  program, called "Interfaith Dialogue: Myth or Reality," will  feature a panel of scholars on the topic, including Rev.  Rebecca Jimenez, campus minister of the IU Center for University Ministry, IU religious studies professor R. Kevin  Jaques, Purdue philosophy professor Donald W. Mitchell and Harold Vogelaar, professor at the Lutheran School of Theology  in Chicago.

The discussion commemorates Sunday's United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural  Organization International Day of Tolerance. The topics will deal with tolerance, love, peace, brotherhood, compassion and  freedom.

"We are trying to bring people from different  cultures and religions so they can sit and talk about  different viewpoints," said Mehmet Akgun, graduate student and  executive member of BMDG.

Graduate student and executive member of the BMDG Hasan Deniz said the group will discuss tolerance and give the Islamic point of view on  current issues.

The BMDG was started a year ago by a group of Turkish graduate students including Akgun, who felt in the wake of Sept. 11 that Islam was unfairly receiving  negative attention on national and local levels.

"They  felt a need to do something about reducing misunderstandings  and misconceptions about Islam," community adviser Darrel Davis said. Davis has had a large role in supporting the group; some of the founding members, have stayed at his home in Bloomington.

The BMDG started reaching out to churches and  synagogues, and last March it held an inaugural ceremony that  included representatives from 17 churches, the Jewish and Hindu communities and other religious groups. Since then there has been an "ongoing building of sharing relationships in the community, including picnics and coffeehouse talks," Davis said.

Tonight's event is co-sponsored by the Center for  the Study of Global Change, IUB International Programs, the  Department of Near Eastern Languages and Cultures, the  Department of Religious Studies and the Arab-American  Association. Admission will be free and is open to all members  of the greater Bloomington community. A reception will follow the program in the President's Room of the IMU where  international homemade foods will be served.

"We want to go every place as long as they are open to dialogue and want to learn more about Islam," Akgun said. "It's the whole  Bloomington community we are aiming to involve, not just  students."

-- Contact staff writer Aaron Uslan at auslan@indiana.edu.

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