Seeing the big picture
The mass media’s representation of certain individuals or groups who
misrepresent a certain religion severely affects the way the public
views that religion. As hard as the media may try, some things are
always left out of the story. The mass media should set its goal on
producing real news, that is, unbiased facts on what is occurring
around the world. It is not only up to the media to give real facts,
but it is also the general public’s responsibility to find out the
truth about religions and cultures. People should not solely depend
on the media for information.
IMAM MOUSTAFA
AL-QAZWINI
Islamic Educational Center of
Orange County, Costa Mesa
With Jesus’ coming into this world, God pitched a huge tent for
human beings to find shelter from storms -- welcoming a great variety
of people at a time in this tent of God in Christ. Christians find
each other by affinity and wish that we could reach out to all
others; of course, we don’t quite know how. At our best we see
reality as existing in the tensions of paradox, ambiguity and
diversity; we agree to disagree. We come to church without leaving
our brain (or hearts and bodies) at the door and then have
opportunities to love all of those who have managed to come in with
their “wrong” ideas.
Christians admire and are appalled by preachers from John Paul II
to Desmond Tutu to Billy Graham to Jerry Fallwell, politicians from
either George Bush to Jimmy Carter, celebrities from Della Reese to
Charlton Heston, athletes from Mary Lou Retton to George Foreman,
authors from Danielle Steele to J.R.R. Tolkien. All are Christians by
God’s grace.
Because we believe that God gave all persons intellects as tools
for understanding and faith development, we trust that sooner or
later others will appreciate Christian unity in diversity. Christians
do our best to demonstrate our religion to others in loving actions,
before we have to use words.
THE VERY REV. CANON
PETER D. HAYNES
St. Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Church, Corona del Mar
Early in Mein Kampf, Adolf Hitler writes of his transformation
into an anti-Semite. He cites the physical appearance and clothing of
several Jewish people he sees on the streets of Vienna and
extrapolates from these few onto the many. He soon charges that there
is at least one Jewish person involved in every immoral and illegal
activity in Germany, and justifies his emerging hostility to a people
based on his knowledge of an insignificant sample.
Stereotyping is the beginning of the descent into prejudice and
hatred. We project the sins (as we see them) of those with whom we
come into contact or of whom we read onto a larger group. Our
negative evaluation of a particular Christian, Muslim, or Jew, for
example, affords an opportunity to defame and marginalize a faith,
culture, nation, or people. If a few are “like that,” they must all
“be or act like that.”
The human impulse toward prejudice emerges out of the dislike of
difference. To be different is to be suspect. It is accentuated by a
feeling of superiority. Racial prejudice may be at its worst when
religion enters into it, for fanaticism can become sanctified. Let us
recall that the linguistic root of “prejudice” is “prejudged,”
judgment before the evidence is examined. People are always ready to
jump from fact to conjecture. Rumors grow from scraps of observed
fact to imposing fabrics of fiction. Charges begin with shreds of
evidence and grow until they are serious enough to condemn others for
life.
Those who demean themselves through harmful and hateful acts
should not be viewed as representative of a great religion or
culture. Their violations of the teachings and history of their faith
and people should not be magnified into metaphors for the larger
group. If a small number of adherents of a religion contravenes the
legacy of integrity, peace and virtue espoused by that faith, their
misdeeds should be placed in a larger perspective. As no individual
would want his entire life judged by one incident or experience, so
no religion or people deserves to be judged by one whose loyalty is
only lip-service.
RABBI MARK MILLER
Temple Bat Yahm,
Newport Beach
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