Religions responsible for helping create a better world

People these days are seeking orientation in a rapidly changing world. In response, all religions – each unique in their customs and traditions – need to pull together, says Chief Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt

By Pinchas Goldschmidt

These are tumultuous times – the waves of pandemic, global warming and migration are high and far-reaching. Most importantly: they are all permanent. COVID-19 isn't going away anytime soon, and neither are the pressures of migration. And we, whose comfort zone has already become somewhat less comfortable, must learn to live with both the pandemic and the new arrivals.

Of course, it is inaccurate to compare the pandemic with immigrants. The former is a serious disease and the latter are good people seeking a better life. They have only one thing in common: both come in spurts.

While we are busy with 3G rules and vaccinations, the next major migrant group – this time via Belarus – is already making its way to Europe.

The choice between Third World and third shot

Much has been written about the understandable motives of immigrants. No one abandons their homeland, the landscape of family and childhood, lightly. But when not only a few, but masses do so, their reality has obviously become unbearable. The old motherlands are plagued by war, corruption, oppression and violence. That makes it hard to resist the pull of freedom, dreams and hopes. And in the end, the choice between the Third World and a third corona shot is an easy one.

Jews and Muslims ride together on tandems through Berlin (photo: picture-alliance/AP)
Juden und Muslime fahren gemeinsam auf Tandems durch Berlin; Foto: picture-alliance/AP

As clear as the migrants' motivation may be – what of ours? Do we, the lucky ones born in the hemisphere of compassion, know what we desire and what we must do? Political populism, as usual, offers easy solutions: lock up everything and everyone! Hopefully, this human abomination will somehow disappear on its own. Their politicians will talk about a "Europe for Europeans", the racists among them will preach "white supremacy", many will spread fear of the "blacks" and "southerners" who want to grab our "wives and daughters". Finally, brainwashed thugs will be incited to commit new atrocities.

Is this approach likely to keep migrants away from the shores on which their hopes are pinned? Probably not, but it will undoubtedly leave another scar of violence and racism on the psyche of the West, which has not yet fully recovered from the atrocities and injustices of the past.

Farewell to monolithic ways of life

There is another way: if we comprehensively mobilise civil society, religious and private sectors to form a partnership for a better world. Humanity needs more sustainable policies – it is busy today with environmental issues, in the fight against global warming or for more sensitivity to the needs of the LGBT community, women, or the helpless among us.

Now more than ever, the world needs a global welfare policy: absolute attention to the quality of water, air, sustainability, as well as the uniqueness of every human being. In addition, fair wages and good healthcare in all three worlds – First, Second and Third.

And we in the West must understand that our way of life will never again be monolithic. We no longer live in societies where everyone is like us and we are like everyone else. Our world and that of our children is very diverse and offers a different, surprising cultural richness that we have never had before. Migrants are a blessing. Migrants have always driven the societies in which they found their new roots – from the biblical Joseph in Egypt to U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris in the White House. Millions of second-generation people everywhere are making their own progress and creating more progress as a result.

Symbolic image of Jewish-Muslim dialogue (photo: picture-alliance/Godong)
Christen, Juden und Muslime leben in Europa. Daraus ergibt sich eine gemeinsame Verantwortung für Gesellschaft. „Es ist an der Zeit, dass Priester, Rabbiner und Imame dem Westen im Allgemeinen und Europa im Besonderen ein funktionierendes Modell der Freiheit, des Glaubens und der Sicherheit anbieten“, meint Oberrabbiner Pinchas Goldschmidt.

Models of common existence

Yet none of this happens by itself. It can either be the result of bitter struggle or of pre-planned, responsible and value-oriented policies. Religious communities have a special role to play here. And, of course, interfaith dialogue. Many are deeply afraid of the growing power of Islam. So let's be honest: the West is essentially based on an operating system that is Christian in origin, but largely secular. It no longer has the wherewithal to deal publicly with challenges of a religious, let alone non-Christian, nature.

Now is the age of clergy and spiritual women and men. The faith communities cannot afford to stand on the sidelines, indifferent and uninvolved. They must offer new models of common existence. Not only between people of different faiths and origins, but alsoat a fundamental  quite fundamentally between religions and their believers on the one hand and the state and its laws on the other.

Let us not be driven into the conflicts that so many expect. Church, mosque, synagogue, in interaction with secular parliaments, must create common and at the same time shared spaces. For those who want to respect and preserve both the values of liberal democracies and religious traditions and customs.

It is time for priests, rabbis and imams to offer the West in general and Europe in particular a working model of freedom, faith and security.

Pinchas Goldschmidt

© Deutsche Welle 2021

Chief Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt is president of the Conference of European Rabbis (CER) and initiator of the newly founded Institute of Freedom of Faith and Security in Europe (IFFSE).

 

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