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Religious Diversity Draws International Scholars
By BILL SCHLOTTER
American studies scholars from around the world will be on campus this summer studying the religious diversity of the United States and finding out first hand how people with vastly differing beliefs can coexist.
The program, titled "Religion in the United States: Pluralism and Public Presence," was developed by the Department of Religious Studies and is funded by the U.S. Department of State's Fulbright American Studies Institute. It is one of nine programs funded by the State Department to bring international scholars to the United States this summer to learn about various aspects of American life.
"Ours is something of an experiment," said Academic Coordinator Wade Clark Roof, chair of religious studies. "The State Department has not typically funded programs that explicitly address religion, but in this post-September 11 world, everybody knows that religion is pretty important in politics."
The institute runs from June 23 through Aug. 5 and includes trips to Los Angeles, Indianapolis, Atlanta, and Washington, D.C. A key focus will be a timely look at how people of different faiths can get along and work toward common goals in a single society.
"The main topic is religious pluralism," said Roof, who noted that more
than 2,000 different religions are practiced in the United States. "I
think the topic encapsulates one of the big challenges of our time:
How in a global world can all the religious populations get along? And
I think that is not just on American minds but also on the minds of
the participants who will come here."
Institute participants are academics from 18 countries: Bosnia, Bulgaria, Cameroon, Canada, China, Czech Republic, Egypt, Finland, India, Indonesia, Japan, Kazakhstan, Nigeria, Pakistan, Romania, Slovak Republic, Tunisia and Uganda. They will stay in the university's Santa Ynez Apartments.
Other topics covered will include the history of religion in the U.S., the demography and sociology of religion, religion and politics, religion and the media, and religion and film.
"I hope our participants take home with them an understanding of American society and religion that is broader than perhaps the stereotypes they might have held before they came," Roof said.
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