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Introduction to IEA's Activities We believe that, rather than being the cause of the problem, religion can and should be a source of solution for conflicts that exist in the Middle East and beyond. · Background In the fall of 2001 in the wake of over a year of needless bloodshed in the Middle East and the horrifying calamity of September 11th in the U.S. the newly-formed Interfaith Encounter Association (IEA) set itself to the daunting task of building and strengthening a grassroots interfaith movement for peace, justice, and sustainability in the Holy Land and in the Middle East. Envisioning a society in which the "otherness" of the Other is not only accepted, but truly understood and respected, the IEA dedicated itself to promoting real coexistence and human peace in the Middle East through cross-cultural study and inter-religious dialogue. The IEA was founded on the following principles and goals: v Equal representation of all faiths in the IEA; v Gender equality in the decision making processes and activities of the IEA; v Outreach to individuals and communities from all faiths, age groups, walks of life, and levels of society; v Outreach to individuals and communities across the religious-secular and political spectra; v Continual recruitment through committed activists on the local and regional levels; v Implementation of interactive programs that effectively change outlooks and attitudes, such as extended weekend seminars and ongoing study groups; v Continual development of new models for effective encounter; and v Ongoing evaluation of all strategies and programs.
Recognition and awards
International Connections · Philosophy & Methodology In the microcosms of the IEA's ongoing dialogue groups, seminars, and study sessions, fear gives way to familiarity, ignorance to understanding, exclusion to inclusion, discrimination to tolerance and respect, and strife to harmony. The goal is not to blend all traditions into one undifferentiated group but to provide a table where all can come and sit in safety and ease, while being fully who they are in their respective religions. In this way the IEA aims to change the dynamics of a society crystallized in a culture of war into a society embedded in a culture of humanized engagement. Thus the IEA views interfaith dialogue not as a goal in of itself but as a tool through which society can be re-crystallized into a culture of peace and harmony. By engaging ordinary people not just their religious, spiritual, or political leaders the IEA is creating extraordinary transformations in the way grassroots people perceive and encounter the Other the seeds of a new crystallization capable of transforming society as a whole. The IEA believes that peace is a stool that stands on three legs: human, economic, and political. The IEA is helping to create, encounter by encounter, the human component to that peace the component so sorely missed in previous peace-initiatives.
The IEA accomplishes its work through its unique programmatic method. The
IEA operates within three concentric circles of interfaith work, each with
the power to grow and impact the circle encapsulating it. In the first and
most preeminent circle the Inner-Israeli circle the IEA
focuses on the promotion of respectful relations between Jews, Muslims,
Christians, Druze, and Baha'is living in Israel. This process in turn
impacts and enables the second circle the Israeli-Palestinian circle
where the IEA works in cooperation with 8 Palestinian organizations across
the Palestinian National Authority (PNA). The work of the first and second
circles aids the work of the third circle the Middle East region
where the IEA has been a major founder in establishing the Middle East
Abrahamic Forum, along with similar organizations from Egypt, Iran, Jordan,
the PNA, Lebanon, Tunisia and Turkey.
The third programmatic section, the Youth Interfaith Encounter (YIE),
designs and implements programs specifically for young adults. Similar to
the challenges facing women are those facing youth. Young people's lack of
religious or social authority often results in their marginalization in
religious and inter-religious circles. Moreover, the dynamics of new and
creative thinking that typify young people's approach to the issues are
especially vital to grassroots interfaith work. In order for such a movement
to truly grow and spread out of the individual encounters into society at
large, it is imperative that today's youth be given the space and the
opportunity to develop themselves, foster their visions for the future, and
enable themselves to achieve it. The IEA responded to this imperative
through the YIE in the spring of 2002. Program Chart
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