A new initiative will encourage "crucial conversations" between Catholics and Muslims in America.
The US Conference of Catholic Bishops announced on Monday the launch
of a new national Catholic-Muslim dialogue group to combat the climate
of fear surrounding Islam.
"As the national conversation around Islam grows increasingly
fraught, coarse and driven by fear and often willful misinformation, the
Catholic Church must help to model real dialogue and good will," Bishop
Mitchell Rozanski of Springfield, Massachusetts, said in a statement.
The bishops' ecumenical and interreligious committee has co-sponsored
three regional Catholic-Muslim dialogues in the last 20 years, but this
is the first national initiative.
"Our current dialogues have advanced the goals of greater
understanding, mutual esteem and collaboration between Muslims and
Catholics, and the members have established lasting ties of friendship
and a deep sense of trust," Rozanski said.
The national dialogue will work alongside, not instead of, regional
Catholic-Muslim dialogues. They are currently operating in the
Mid-Atlantic, Midwest and West Coast and each is co-chaired by a bishop
and a Muslim leader from the region.
The "crucial conversation" at a national level will be headed up by
Archbishop Blase Cupich of the Diocese of Chicago, Rozanski said. The
Muslim co-chair is yet to be announced.
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