Religious education and the potential for mitigating xenophobia

This paper arises from our concerns regarding the documented increases in xenophobia in the UK and more widely around the world. This is evidenced by a rise in religiously motivated hate crimes, especially against Muslims and Jews. Our enquiry is into the potential religious education has to mitigat...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Religious Education
Authors: Hannam, Patricia (Author) ; Panjwani, Farid 1969- (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Springer [2020]
In: Journal of Religious Education
RelBib Classification:AH Religious education
KBF British Isles
NCA Ethics
RF Christian education; catechetics
Further subjects:B Anti-semitism
B Religious Education
B Islamophobia
B Xenophobia
B Teaching
Online Access: Volltext (Resolving-System)
Description
Summary:This paper arises from our concerns regarding the documented increases in xenophobia in the UK and more widely around the world. This is evidenced by a rise in religiously motivated hate crimes, especially against Muslims and Jews. Our enquiry is into the potential religious education has to mitigate xenophobia and educational justification for it to do so. We suggest that a religious education seeking to mitigate xenophobia will need teachers who take plurality seriously. Such teachers will need courage as well as the capacity to navigate complexity of lives lived with a religious orientation, with open mindedness. This means not only appreciating there is a great deal to know in terms of history and the lived human religious experience but also that religious life has an existential dimension which cannot be reduced to beliefs and practices. We ask what it is that the public sphere needs educationally from religious education at this point in history. This paper concludes by making the point that religious education is uniquely placed, to bring humanity to the heart of education and in so doing mitigate xenophobia, in light of its close connection to human experience. Finally, we alert the religious education community to the significance of doing this at this time, and the danger of ignoring it, for the continued well-being of the public sphere itself.
ISSN:2199-4625
Contains:Enthalten in: Journal of Religious Education
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1007/s40839-020-00120-8