The 12thSarajevo UN World Interfaith Harmony Week
February 5–12, 2024
International Forum Bosnia, Sarajevo
International Forum Bosnia will be holding a programme of events to mark the 12th Sarajevo UN World Interfaith Harmony Week this year in response to the appeal by the UN General Assembly session held on October 20, 2010, to member-states. While International Forum Bosnia will, as usual, be organising and coordinating the activities, a number of other national and international organisations and societies will also be participating and contributing.
The key themes of this year''s programme are summed up in the title:
Global Ethics: Urgent Questions and Challenges.
The programme will take place on Wednesday the 5th of February and Thursday the 12thof February. There will be three academic panels. The panels will take the form of hybrid meetings, with some participants present in person and others through Zoom. Participants will be from public and academic life in Bosnia, other universities around the world, and the Bosnian diaspora. The panels will be on the following topics:
Ø First Panel on Global Ethics: Jewish, Christian, and Muslims Views on Urgent Questions and Challenges
The project to conceive of and institute a Global Ethics lies at the heart of all the monotheisms and the universal or world religions. More specifically, the globalisation of the ethical out of our necessarily individual encounter with and responsibility before a personal but transcendent God is the common core of the Abrahamic traditions. His Oneness is the guarantor of our uniqueness. It is reflected in the shared complex of sacrificial individualism on which all three of these traditions and communities are built. Nothing is more urgent at the present juncture of Jewish, Muslim, and Christian relations than the challenge of recovering and developing this ethical common ground in the construction of plural post-secular orders and societies that can balance the demands of identity with those of difference, as we emerge towards global forms of interaction and find ways to respect and manage the conflict of rights and claims that is inherent to coexistence within a world that can never be anything but shared.
Ø Second Panel on Lady Mary, the Mother of Jesus Christ: A Symbol of Maternal Mercy and the Striving for Peace or Something Else?
The Lady Mary is both a shared and a discrete symbol – connecting and dividing the traditions and their adherents. Born into the Jewish tradition and a major presence in the Muslim, she is nonetheless principally identified with the Christian traditions, within which she has been represented and interpreted as both fundamental and foreign to its core. She has been variously interpreted as an inheritance of paganism and an expression of the primordial feminine divine. At the same time, she is seen as offering a compensatory mechanism that both preserves and contests the paternalistic nature of Abrahamic monotheism, as both a symbolisation of oppressive heteronormativity and phallogocentrism and one of resistance to phallicism by the encompassing feminine. Finally, she has been seen as a symbol that allows us to transcend the binary and opens up pathways of identification that transgress reductive identity. It is particularly striking under conditions of modernity and post-modernity that Mary and Marian apparitions, shrines, and pilgrimages have become major mechanisms for mediating access to the divine and of hierophany. Mary has become a powerful symbol of peace and the striving for peace, but, like any powerful religious symbol, her cloak has always also been deployed ideological cover to projects that promote peace by the redirection of violence and the reinforcement of boundaries.
Ø Third Panel on Judaism, Christianity, and Islam in Hans Küng''s Project of a Global Ethic
The question of a global ethic or Weltethos is particularly associated Hans Küng, one of the leading Catholic theologians of the second half of the 20th century, whose relationship with the Catholic hierarchy and magisterium was, to say the least, complex. His comprehensive project to restructure Christianity''s self-understanding involved major attempts to reconceptualise the sister religions of Judaism and Islam as well, efforts ultimately integrated into his project for a Global Ethic or the establishment of a common substrate and content to the world religions and the distillation of a shared set of values to underpin global justice and politics, global business practice, and global culture. For some, this is the only pathway to building a shared world space within which difference can flourish and justice be provided a forum. To others, it can seem like the appropriation of projected commonalities in the service of reification, the imposition of imagined traditions, and the reduction of fundamentally other histories and cultures within a post-Christian frame – not unlike Habermas'' post-secularism.
The 12thSarajevo UN World Interfaith Harmony Week
February 5–12, 2024
International Forum Bosnia, Sarajevo
February 8, 2024
11 a.m. – 15 p.m.
First Panel on Global Ethics: Jewish, Christian, and Muslims Views on Urgent Questions and Challenges
Moderator: Džamna Duman
Join Zoom Meeting
https://us06web.zoom.us/j/89759379033?pwd=Qme1bNMRh48znQpuS0xNw3FKGlE6v4.1
Meeting ID: 897 5937 9033
Passcode: 655888
Mile Babić, A Reflection on the Declaration of the Parliament of the World’s Religions
Amra Hadžimuhamedović, Perceiving the Creator through the Veils of Arrogance and Oblivion: Contemporary Shaping of Religious Heritage by Navigating the Nature-Culture Interplay
Alen Kristić, The Challenge of Ecological Address: The Question of the Credibility of the Abrahamic Religions and the Dialogue between them in and beyond the Bosnian and Herzegovinian Context
Rusmir Šadić, The Aesthetics of the Sacred: On Navid Kermani’s Books, God is Beautiful andWonder beyond Belief: On Christianity
Krsto Mijanović, The Ethics of Bosnianhood as seen from the Orthodox Church
February 9, 2024
14-17 p.m.
Second Panel on Lady Mary, the Mother of Jesus Christ: A Symbol of Maternal Mercy and the Striving for Peace or Something Else?
Moderator: Asim Zubčević
Join Zoom Meeting
https://us06web.zoom.us/j/87256603640?pwd=ORu3Tz2OfBX7TqXRbRinDEv2cH3Ghu.1
Meeting ID: 872 5660 3640
Passcode: 909013
Desmond Maurer, Mary and the Politics of Peace
Marko Antonio Brkić, Lady Mary as ''point of recognition'' in process of transformation of social capital
Mujadad Zaman, Our Lady of the Niche: Conversing Islamic Theology today with the Image of Mary
Ivo Marković, The Catholic Political Use of Marian Piety in the Struggle against the Communist Ideologies
Abdel Latif Chalikandi, Mary, the Mother of Jesus: Her Image in the Quran and Islamic Tradition as a Unifying Figure
Rusmir Mahmutećehajić, Lady Mary in Miguel de Unamunoʼs Philosophy
February 10, 2024
11 a.m. – 15 p.m.
Third Panel on Judaism, Christianity, and Islam in Hans Küng''s Project of a Global Ethic
Moderator: Fatima Mahmutćehajić
Join Zoom Meeting
https://us06web.zoom.us/j/85282336435?pwd=T3PrShsImtG1bNH3DLIxhSoUUYruHE.1
Meeting ID: 852 8233 6435
Passcode: 039718
Theresa Beilschmidt, Global Ethic: From Hans Küng’s Abrahamic Research to Practical Interfaith Collaboration at a Local Level
Paul Ballanfat, The Ambivalence of Might
Desmond Maurer, Post-Secular Sacrifice and the Global Particular: Abraham, Kant, Benedict
Asim Zubčević, Deconstructing a reified concept of Islam in Hans Küng''s Islam by Rusmir Mahmutćehajić''s Dialogical Glosses: on Hans Küng''s Islam
Asim Delibašić, Universal and Particular in the Religions: ATraditionalist Reflection on Hans Küng
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