Faculty Profiles

Faculty Profiles

Ibrahim Abu-Rabi
Efrain Agosto
Kelton Cobb
Carl Dudley
Heidi Hadsell
Uriah Kim

Worth Loomis
Ingrid Mattson
James Nieman
David Roozen
Jane Smith
Scott Thumma
Miriam Therese Winter


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Steven Blackburn
Yehezkel Landau
Adair Lummis
Benjamin K. Watts

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IBRAHIM ABU-RABI

Benedict Anderson's Imagined Communities:  Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism has enabled me to understand the complexity of the interaction between nationalism and religion in the modern world.  In my search to understand the position of Christianity and Islam in modern industrial societies, I try to combine the philosophical/theological dimensions of religion with the social and political.  In modern Islamic intellectual history, it is quite impossible to understand the position of Islam without having a clear understanding of such terms as nationalism, secularism, industrialization and modernity.  Modern Islamic ideas and forces have been the product of not just the past tradition, but the intellectual, social, political, and economic transformations of the modern world as well.  Once we understand these important facts, we will be able to conduct interreligious dialogue on the basis of both theology and modern facts.

Contact Info:
Duncan Black Macdonald Center for the Study of Islam and Christian/Muslim Relations
77 Sherman Street
Hartford, CT 06105 USA
Telephone: 860/509-9530
Fax: 860/509-9539
Email:aburabi@hartsem.edu
Visit Dr. Abu-Rabi's web page

The Macdonald Center Web Site

 

 

 

 

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