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Home  >  Publications  >  The Center Newsletter  >  Winter 2003  > 
Michael Nazir Ali
Published In
South Asian Studies
Winter 2003
Issue 81
Published: January 3, 2003
An Anglican Perspective on South Asia
Posted: Friday, January 3, 2003


Drawing on his unique perspective as a Pakistani Anglican bishop, the Reverend Michael Nazir Ali, currently Anglican Bishop of Rochester (U.K.), discussed the promise and perils of contemporary Christian-Muslim relations at a November 1 Center seminar co-sponsored by the International Fellowship of Evangelical Mission Theologians (INFEMIT). Having long served as the Bishop of Raiwind in the Anglican Church of Pakistan, he offered a well-informed view of the religious situation in South Asia.

Nazir Ali insisted that the unresolved Kashmir dispute between India and Pakistan accounts for most Islamic radicalism in South Asia, which is home to about 400 million Muslims, one-third of the world’s Muslim population. Analysts who contend that it is the Israeli-Palestinian confl ict that largely stimulates this region’s resentment of the West are simply wrong, he said. To help counter this resentment, Nazir Ali proposed ways of fostering a more constructive and fruitful Christian-Muslim theological dialogue.

His comments elicited numerous questions from the policy analysts, government officials, religious leaders, and journalists in attendance. They included David Abramson of the U.S. Department of State, Walter Berns of the American Enterprise Institute, John Casson of the British Embassy, Karin Finkler of Congressman Pitts’s office, Aziz Haniffa of India Abroad, Persis Khambatta of the Asia Foundation, Diane Knippers of the Institute for Religion and Democracy, Stanley Kurtz of the Hudson Institute, Barbara Ledeen of the Senate Republican Conference, Paul Marshall of Freedom House, and Tad Stahnke of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom. Center fellow Timothy Samuel Shah moderated the exchange.

Latest Publication
Center Conversations, Number 17
Hindu Nationalism vs. Islamic Jihad: Religious Militancy in South Asia
A Conversation with Cedric Prakash, Teesta Setalvad, Kamal Chenoy, Sumit Ganguly, Sunil Khilnani, and Jonah Blank

On June 10, 2002, the Ethics and Public Policy Center sponsored a conference in which six experts on South Asia discussed the impact of increasing religious militancy—Hindu as well as Islamic—on geopolitical stability and religious freedom in the subcontinent. Co-sponsoring the conference was INFEMIT, a network of Third World theologians and activists led by Dr. Vinay Samuel. In the edited transcript that follows, each of the six experts makes brief remarks. Then other conference participants join them in a lively discussion. Moderator Timothy Samuel Shah is a fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center specializing in South Asia. 

 The views expressed by EPPC scholars in their work are their individual views only and are not to be imputed to EPPC as an institution.     
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