One of the main things we seemed to have in the past but seem to have completely lost today is religious leadership.
I don’t know how it worked in other religions, but if there is religious tension between two different religious groups, I won’t expect ordinary people to act rationally. Some of them may have the brains to try to pacify the situation, others may be more impulsive so a mob is always a mob. But if there is a priest or other religious figure in that location, I definitely expect them to be aware of the message of peace of their religion and to be able to bring their mobs back to reason. Because otherwise that’s not a “man of religion” by definition. It’s the opposite actually.
Today, it’s the preachers themselves who will fire-up the mobs and incite them to do all sorts of nonsense. So here is two examples One from today’s Pakistan, the second from 1993 / Turkey:
https://www.yahoo.com/news/mob-burns-pak...35591.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sivas_massacre
Because of this, in today’s conditions it is widely accepted that adherence to a religious dogma may actually obstruct spiritual growth instead of promoting it.
For this reason, many scholars who happen to be a part of the religion of Islam have been saying for decades that we are allowed to carry out our religious practice in a totally individualized manner (alone in the privacy of our homes) if we want to. And I know this from personal experience too. Our preachers here have the habit of making medium length speeches in Friday prayers and in some other occasions. I cannot say that I like and/or approve of everything they say at every time. I cannot generalize on that. We still have very knowledgeable and sincere preachers too. But in one instance (Just before the election in May 14th) we even had a preacher who was calling for rebellion and mass murder in case the secular opposition was to win the elections.
So the Harsh reality is: The time of trusting some patriarchal figure for guidance and direction is over. And I don’t see this as a bad thing. With all the technological / social possibilities of our time (improved access to all sorts of written, spoken of video materials combined with a level of education – for the most of us – that allows us to discriminate and make intelligent choices among all these materials) why would anyone just trust one guy anyway?
In this respect, my religion is full of reminders like “Trust the word of knowledgeable people” (people who are experts in their areas) or “Don’t you evet use your reason?” (Don’t you ever try to measure things with your own intelligence?).
So in today’s world, this type of mob activity should be criminalized. There is a French sociologist called Gustave Le Bon who worked in these issues in his book “Crowd: A Study of the Popular Mind”.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Crowd:...pular_Mind
My conclusion from that very interesting book is: You cannot / should not be decriminalized simply because you did something collectively while being a part of a group of individuals or mob. SO in the Pakistan example above (or very similar events that seem to have increased a lot under the government of the populist leader Modi) these guys have to be punished one by one for their acts of vandalism.
Also, we don’t just hate churches or synagogues because we are Muslims. Personally, I did pray in Christian sacred places and did even receive blessings from Sikh or Hindu religious figures when I travelled to India. So lash those guys for me please
I don’t know how it worked in other religions, but if there is religious tension between two different religious groups, I won’t expect ordinary people to act rationally. Some of them may have the brains to try to pacify the situation, others may be more impulsive so a mob is always a mob. But if there is a priest or other religious figure in that location, I definitely expect them to be aware of the message of peace of their religion and to be able to bring their mobs back to reason. Because otherwise that’s not a “man of religion” by definition. It’s the opposite actually.
Today, it’s the preachers themselves who will fire-up the mobs and incite them to do all sorts of nonsense. So here is two examples One from today’s Pakistan, the second from 1993 / Turkey:
https://www.yahoo.com/news/mob-burns-pak...35591.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sivas_massacre
Because of this, in today’s conditions it is widely accepted that adherence to a religious dogma may actually obstruct spiritual growth instead of promoting it.
For this reason, many scholars who happen to be a part of the religion of Islam have been saying for decades that we are allowed to carry out our religious practice in a totally individualized manner (alone in the privacy of our homes) if we want to. And I know this from personal experience too. Our preachers here have the habit of making medium length speeches in Friday prayers and in some other occasions. I cannot say that I like and/or approve of everything they say at every time. I cannot generalize on that. We still have very knowledgeable and sincere preachers too. But in one instance (Just before the election in May 14th) we even had a preacher who was calling for rebellion and mass murder in case the secular opposition was to win the elections.
So the Harsh reality is: The time of trusting some patriarchal figure for guidance and direction is over. And I don’t see this as a bad thing. With all the technological / social possibilities of our time (improved access to all sorts of written, spoken of video materials combined with a level of education – for the most of us – that allows us to discriminate and make intelligent choices among all these materials) why would anyone just trust one guy anyway?
In this respect, my religion is full of reminders like “Trust the word of knowledgeable people” (people who are experts in their areas) or “Don’t you evet use your reason?” (Don’t you ever try to measure things with your own intelligence?).
So in today’s world, this type of mob activity should be criminalized. There is a French sociologist called Gustave Le Bon who worked in these issues in his book “Crowd: A Study of the Popular Mind”.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Crowd:...pular_Mind
My conclusion from that very interesting book is: You cannot / should not be decriminalized simply because you did something collectively while being a part of a group of individuals or mob. SO in the Pakistan example above (or very similar events that seem to have increased a lot under the government of the populist leader Modi) these guys have to be punished one by one for their acts of vandalism.
Also, we don’t just hate churches or synagogues because we are Muslims. Personally, I did pray in Christian sacred places and did even receive blessings from Sikh or Hindu religious figures when I travelled to India. So lash those guys for me please