Dialogue partners see hope for future of  Catholic-Muslim relations
By Sean Gallagher       
        
The Sept. 12 lecture delivered by Pope Benedict XVI at  the University of Regensburg in Germany—and the sharp Muslim reaction to it in  many parts of the world—should not have a negative impact upon Catholic-Muslim  relations in central and southern Indiana, according to participants in  interreligious         dialogues. 
        Pope Benedict said on Sept. 17 that he was “deeply  sorry” that Muslims were offended by his reference to a historical criticism of  Islam from a 14th century Byzantine emperor, which he said does not reflect his  own opinion.        “I am deeply sorry for the reactions in some countries  to a few passages of my address at the University of Regensburg,  which were considered offensive to the sensibility of Muslims,” the pope said. 
        Benedictine Sister Mary Margaret Funk, a member of Our  Lady of Grace Monastery in Beech Grove, has participated in many interreligious  dialogues over the years sponsored both by the Holy See and the U.S.  bishops.        She thinks that an effective way to overcome the kind  of interreligious        tensions evidenced in the current controversy about  the pope’s lecture is through education. This would include learning about the  Church’s acknowledgement that Muslims worship the same God that Christians and  Jews do.
         “We have to be educated ourselves as to what is  Islam,” said Sister Mary Margaret, who authored a book on Islam titled Islam  Is. “They want to be seen as [having] a pure religion, with its own integrity  and their own beliefs.”        
        One Muslim whom Sister Mary Margaret has entered into  dialogue with is Dr. Sayyid M. Sayeed, the founder and past general secretary  of the Plainfield-based Islamic Society of North America. He currently serves  in Washington, D.C., as the organization’s national  director.        
        Sayeed, who described Catholic-Muslim relations in Indiana as “very cordial [and] warm,” said that dialogues between the  two communities have been fruitful.        “For both communities, it has helped us to build  bridges and to have certain common causes and to have joint conferences … at  every level—national, local, parish and dioceses,” he said.
        
        Msgr. Joseph F. Schaedel, archdiocesan vicar general,  has participated in Catholic-Muslim interchanges, although in a more limited way  than Sister Mary Margaret and Sayeed.        Referring to an analysis of relations between  Christians, Jews and Muslims made by Australian Cardinal George Pell of Sydney,  Msgr. Schaedel said it is important to protect and continue to strengthen these  bridges for the future harmony of societies around the world.        
        Jews, Catholics and Muslims all         worship the same God,” Msgr. Schaedel said. “Now we  may have different views of that God. But there’s only one God, and we all seek  to worship the same God. And we need to build from that. 
        If we don’t build from that, then we’re going to get  into all kinds of ideological and even political agendas and strife, and  divisions are going to result. I don’t think anybody wants that.”        For Sister Mary Margaret, building bridges between  Catholics and Muslims here in Indiana  was especially important after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. 
        And it was through meetings with her Muslim dialogue  partners after the attacks that they went from official dialogue participants  to becoming friends.        “We just put down our texts and talked to each other  as persons,” Sister Mary Margaret said. “From there, we became friends.”        
        More than just benefiting herself, Sister Mary  Margaret said that Catholic-Muslim interchange at the parish level in the  archdiocese increased greatly after Sept. 11.        Sayeed said that, despite the current controversy,  there is no reason why Catholic-Muslim relations should not remain strong in Indiana in the months  and years to come.        
        This unfortunate incident should have no effect on  that because this does not mean the reversal of the policy that the Vatican  has adopted 40 years ago where they declared [at the Second Vatican Council]  they hold the religion of Islam in high esteem,” he said.        Sayeed also expressed his belief that relations  between Catholics and Muslims in Indiana  and across the country will only continue to be deepened in the months and  years to come. 
        "It will be further strengthened because, day by day,  more and more interaction clears away misunderstandings and stereotypes that  might have accumulated over hundreds of years,” he said.        Msgr. Schaedel said that this interaction can happen  in a fruitful way at the most basic level—person to person. 
        “If you have any Muslim neighbors in your  neighborhood, seize the opportunity to talk with them,” he said. “Maybe this  statement on the part of the pope and the reaction to it is, as we say at the  Easter Vigil, a ‘happy fault’ because it now gives us something to talk about.”
        (For more information about Islam, go online to read  Sister Mary Margaret’s Catholic Update pamphlet on the religion at  www.americancatholic.org/Newsletters /CU/ac0405.asp.) †