previous article in this issue | next article in this issue |
Preview first page |
Document Details : Title: Complementarity or Divide? Subtitle: Enhancing Difference in Buddhist-Christian Dialogue. In Search of a Just Peace in Sri Lanka Author(s): FERNANDO, Jude Lal Journal: Studies in Interreligious Dialogue Volume: 21 Issue: 2 Date: 2011 Pages: 170-187 DOI: 10.2143/SID.21.2.2141939 Abstract : The representation of religious and ethno-nationalist conflicts in Sri Lanka as an Orientalist-Occidentalist divide has concealed the hegemonic politics of interpretation of collective identities. In this representation, cultures and religions have been reduced to a fixed un-changing consciousness without noticing the historical changes that the cultures and religions undergo through multiple interactions and socio-political dynamics. This categorisation, in its Occidentalism, reduces biblical faith to belief in an abstract reality even as it ignores the concrete and existential meaning that faith in a transcendent God has for Semitic culture and its peoples. Correspondingly, a racialised particularistic ethic has been constructed out of Buddhism in a way that undermines its universal appeal. This article explores how Buddhism and Christianity can contribute to resolving religious and ethno-nationalist conflicts in Sri Lanka by appealing to the soteriological idioms of liberative truth and love in a dialogical mode. |
|