Available Formats
The Future of Religious Minorities in the Middle East
By (Author) John Eibner
Contributions by Taner Akam
Contributions by Cengiz Aktar
Contributions by Madawi Al-Rasheed
Contributions by Fabrice Balanche
Contributions by Patrick Cockburn
Contributions by Marius Deeb
Contributions by John Eibner
Contributions by Amine Gemayel
Contributions by Joshua Landis
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
19th June 2019
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Regional / International studies
305.60956
Paperback
276
Width 152mm, Height 223mm, Spine 20mm
422g
This volume addresses the domestic and international politics that have created conditions for contemporary religious cleansing in the Middle East. It provides a platform for a host of distinguished scholars, journalists, human rights activists, and political practitioners. The contributors come from diverse political, cultural, and religious backgrounds; each one drawing on a deep wellspring of scholarship, experience, sobriety, and passion. Collectively, they make a major contribution to understanding the dynamics of the mortal threat to social pluralism upon which the survival of religious minorities depend.
For more than a century, the delicate fabric of inter-communal relations in the Middle East has been unraveling, at the expense of religious and ethnic minorities. Multiple causes usually involve some combination of strident nationalism and Islamic fundamentalism. While in recent years, Western eyes have understandably been focused primarily on the threat that jihadist terrorism poses to their societies, but the ongoing existential threat to deep-rooted Christian communities and other religious and ethnic minorities is often ignored or accepted as inevitable. This collection of closely argued essays drawn from a cross-section of top-shelf scholars, journalists, human rights activists, and political practitioners highlights both the historical and contemporary dynamics that have placed Christian communities, in particular, under siege. It should serve as a wakeup call to all those who care about religious freedom, political pluralism, and human rights. -- Bruce Maddy-Weitzman, Tel Aviv University
Under the capable editorship of John Eibner, this book is a vivid historical document written with precision and passion by twenty scholars about Islam's war against Christians, and other non-Muslims, in the Middle East. Offering penetrating political analyses and a keen sense of moral urgency, the authors detail Christianity's decline and disappearance in Syria and Iraq, Lebanon and Egypt, and elsewhere. A truly must read for anyone concerned about The Future of Religious Minorities in the Middle East. -- Mordechai Nisan, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
This truly international collection (from Zrich, Geneva, Bern, Oxford, Boston) of papers, delivered by twenty prominent scholars in Near-Eastern studies, looks at situational developments in the persecution of religious minorities in predominantly Islamic religions. The papers here present, based both on scholarship and on their personal experiences, a properly varied set of perspectives on what is going wrong. This volume looks religious cleansing in the face, calls it for what it is, and attempts to point most thoughtfully to the factors that may lead to working successfully against the forceful suppression of religious pluralism, even in the heart of an important but troubled region of our world which we can otherwise only ruefully watch coming apart at the seams. -- M.J. Connolly, Boston College
John Eibner, PhD, is CEO of Christian Solidarity International