Shalom Salaam. Two words I never thought I would hear uttered in the same sentence by an Imam. But last week I did. I was in a convention centre in Anaheim, California with around three thousand five hundred people. All from different countries, religions, ethnicities and social backgrounds. The unifying factor was that we are all students of the Kabbalah Centre.
We were all there to celebrate Rosh Hashanah, a festival more traditionally known as the Jewish New Year, but to the Kabbalists of centuries ago and today, the seed of the year for all people.
After the first day of the festival in the evening there was a lecture with a guest speaker. He was a Muslim Imam, highly respected, and in charge of one of the three biggest Muslim communities in the United States. He was introduced on stage by Yehuda Berg, one of the directors of the Kabbalah Centre , a leading Kabbalah instructor and one of the sons of the Rav and Karen Berg the leaders of the Centre. In his introduction Yehuda explained how he and the Imam had met to discuss their respective spiritual beliefs and how they could utilize those to positively impact upon the world.
The Imam began his speech simply with the word shalom followed by salaam. As many of you will be aware both these words mean peace in Hebrew and Arabic respectively. These simple words alone, spoken side by side, by a Muslim Imam on stage with a Jewish (albeit Kabbalist) Rabbi were in themselves extraordinarily moving.
He talked of his meetings with Yehuda and his brother Michael, of the mission that the brothers and their parents shared; the mission of the Kabbalah Centre to promote peace and help bring the end of pain and suffering in the world, through individual change. He discussed the similarities between the holy Quran and the Torah, ultimately of the similarities between Islam and Judaism - two faiths which are almost akin to brothers who instead of being close friends turned into arch enemies. He shared valuable insights from the holy Quran and told of how he had learned from the Kabbalah books written by the Berg family that he had read and been inspired to use some of what he had learnt in sermons to his own congregation.
He was a wonderful orator and true spiritual leader, humble, open to the fact that he may not know everything - that there was wisdom to be learnt and shared from other religions or spiritual schools of thought. He gently urged the importance of all of us students to continue our work, namely the work of becoming better people ourselves so that we could in turn be better citizens of the world and make it a better place. His speech was received by a rapturous audience and deafening applause and cheers.
Afterwards we watched a video of a recent trip by Yehuda Berg to Palestine to not only visit some of the holy sites (the Cave of Machapela and the tomb of Joseph) but also to meet with many of the Palestinian leaders to discuss bringing peace to a notoriously fractious area.
We watched as Palestinian leaders spoke of their desire to be treated with respect but also to treat others with respect 'as we are all the same', we saw grave sites of their family members killed as a result of ongoing fractions with Israel. We felt their frustration, angst and sadness that there could not be peace and that they had to fight. It was incredibly moving and I am not ashamed to admit that I had tears streaming down my face. I doubt I was the only one.
These were people normally shunned and demonized by large parts of the western media and society but here we saw the human beings beyond the media portrayal. And here they were sat alongside their 'enemy' (essentially a Jewish rabbi) talking of their similar values and desires and the need to treat each other with respect and human dignity. Rather than fighting over their differences, they focused on their similarities.
It was incredibly poignant considering that we live in a time where the Islamic world is in great turmoil. It is as though Islam is going through its growing pains on a very public world stage, from the Arab Spring, to civil wars and extremism taking hold of otherwise peaceful Muslim communities across the world, it is easy to forget in the face of all the media reports that there are over 2 billion Muslims across the world and the extremists and preachers of hatred and separation amongst those 2 billion probably make up much less than 1 % of all Muslims.
It is too easy for organisations, many of whom have political agendas, to jump on the stories of the 1%, to publish sensationalised headlines and copy to sell more newspapers but ultimately creating more separation, hatred and fear and often playing right into the hands of the extremists.
The demonization of Islam by the media, by society and by influential governments will cause further separation, lack of understanding and ultimately bloodshed in the world. Our real fear should be against those in power who seek to continue this separation rather than help to end it and bring unity.
Friends often ask me to explain what it is that I have got out of being a student of the Kabbalah centre and what the Centre does. I hope this blog goes to show a mere snippet of the incredible work carried out by the Centre to go towards bringing peace and unity to places where others would allow the hatred, division and separation continue. United we stand, divided we fall.
Shalom Salaam
Ambi Sitham. Kabbalah student since 2008.
Follow Ambi Sitham on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ambisitham
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They do an incredible job of talking up their good deeds but they fail to mention that everything with them costs money, lots and lots of bucketloads of money, I can assure you that Ms Sitham would've been paying a hefty price having been a student with them for 4 years now. Oh they'll have a darned good reason for justifying it, too. But don't tell me that this is all about peace, love and mung beans. Not when there's millions and billions of tax-free dollars to be had by the Bergs. Nope, they're only in it for one thing, but they've done the ultimate Bait and Switch (Philip Berg used to be an insurance salesman, this is one of the tricks of his trade) and convinced their many followers that they're not in it at all for that. With grand gestures like this Imam coming to visit (although I can guarantee they only produce such grand gestures at big events) who can blame the followers for being completely and utterly duped? The levels of deceit are breathtaking.
No, it's all about money with the Centre, but the efforts that they make to show that they're not just in it for money is incredible; but in the business that they're in, I guess it's absolutely necessary. So you'll see them bring out Imams making wonderful speeches and showering them with wonderful words, or videos of the school that they built in Israel which teaches Arab and Jewish kids how to have peace, etc...
What they don't tell you is that they host "sacred site tours" in Israel, some of them in occupied territories (such as the tomb of Rachel where their red string is supposed to be bound and blessed at) and so they need permission from the Palestinians to be able to have these tours, which of course brings them many hundreds of thousands of dollars in revenue (yes, tax-free). Perhaps more.
Sharon
There's even more wisdom to be learned from science. Here's a little of it - there is no God - and all the constructs of religion and spirituality are generated by nothing more than the berserk human imagination in pursuit of labelling other human beings as "other" and "lesser".
Learn that, and maybe you'll experience real spiritual freedom.
And here's another lesson from the world of real truth:
1% of 2 billion is 20 million. That's 20 million "extremists and preachers of hatred and separation" for the other 99 % to be apologising for - which they always do.
Embrace the truth that there is no God, and all that poison evaporates away to nothing.
Complaining that there are those who seek political mischief from religion is hilarious.
All religion is is political mischief, and as long as we continue to embrace it as a species there will be bloodshed, torture, human woe and war.
I doubt you'd even get the religious to agree with you.
Religion is poison to human flourishing, and always has been. A disease of the mind, the only truth for which is the cure.
And once all religion is toast, which it one day will be, the human beings of that great and wise time will look back on us now in slack-jawed amazement at our degree of derangement.
One's just as bad as the other. Poor, deluded fools!
And did he also visit Gaza and speak with those nice Hamas folks? Now THAT would have been interesting.
Well, if a self-congratulatory lecture along with a video can generate such a euphoric response, I would say that these two religions clearly have a long way to go before "peace" is achieved.
Predictably the author blames much of the discord on "demonization of Islam by the media, by society and by influential governments". Other posters have dealt with this nonsensical theory.
And what is all this peace stuff anyway? Last I heard the majority of Palestinians would be thrilled to see the Israelis driven into the sea, and I'll bet the majority of Israelis would be more than thrilled for the Palestinians to suffer a similar fate.
I really have to take issue with this, and I need to look no further than recent newspaper headlines ...
Government Minister in Pakistan puts a price on the head of a US Citizen
Salman Rushdies life is again threatened by a "Cleric"
Blashphemy Law discussed at UN (i.e. you may not speak freely)
Yes, I really do fear people in power in the Muslim world who demonise everyone in the West and try and foist beliefs on us we fought in the past to protect against.
The people demonising Muslims the most are generally other Muslims, you can pretty much laugh at most Christian Fundamentalists say in the US as just very misguided, at least they arent putting a bounty on peoples heads for disagreeing with them or burning down a lot of buildings after watching the Life of Brian
Where are all the women 'Imams' Where are all the voices of moderate islamism amongst this clamour for calm?
When Islam treats all persons regardless of colour, creed, sexuality, religion etc equally, then (and only then) can Islam move forward into the 21st Century.
FRANZ_KAFKA@surrealmail.com
Where no-one will be sympathetic to your complaint for no particular reason.
For sure that would be the most efficient 'cure' to the problem.
Well, if a self-congratulatory lecture along with a video can generate such a euphoric response, I would say that these two religions clearly have a long way to go before "peace" is achieved.
Predictably the author blames much of the discord on "demonization of Islam by the media, by society and by influential governments". Brentmeister below deals with that one.
And what is all this peace stuff anyway? Last I heard the majority of Palestinians would be thrilled to see the Israelis driven into the sea, and I'll bet the majority of Israelis would be more than thrilled for the Palestinians to suffer a similar fate.