Not exact matches
But having migrated from one
side of the secular /
religious divide to the other, I can say for certain that trends can be reversed; even the orneriest, least receptive nones can be reached — and all without sacrificing a rigorous, orthodox view
of Scripture.
That goes for people on both
side of the
divide, atheists and the
religious.
Iraq is a big land and has many bordering countries and a population
of many Races, and many Religions and Faiths that were known or unknown beliefs... all
of those lived in harmony during S - adam regime and every body was practicing his rights with out fear or with just a little fear But now having messed up the whole setup and the control
of this mixed nation that were under a secular umbrella has cleverly for some ended it to be handed to
Religious extremes at all
sides of borders who are now fighting each other for taking control over the country or having it
divided in to pieces.
There were only two
religious possibilities, Christianity and Judaism, and no honest person on either
side of this
divide was in any doubt about the status
of the latter as a minority on sufferance.
At the very least, a renewed culture
of hospitality could help debunk what seems (at least on the Internet) to be an operating assumption
of Americans on both
sides of our
religious - cultural - political
divides: the belief that our «enemies» are almost uniformly malevolent and unintelligent.
Today, the population
of South Asia is
divided into dozens
of ethnic, linguistic, and
religious groups that live
side by
side — but not always in harmony.
A fine film on any terms, it's also that rarest
of beasts: a
religious - themed story that should draw empathy from viewers on either
side of the spiritual
divide.
That broader story is told through the conflicting perspectives
of Lord Mountbatten (Hugh Bonneville), the British viceroy sent in 1947 to oversee a post-colonial transition that requires some nimble negotiation with the locals, along with two romantically linked young members
of his domestic staff who hail from opposite
sides of the Hindi - Muslim
religious divide.
The Independent Monitoring Commission (IMC) was set up under the aegis
of the Good Friday Agreement 1998 to monitor the levels
of paramilitary activity in the province and to assess whether the paramilitaries on both
sides of the
religious divide are pursuing exclusively peaceful means and decommissioning their weaponry.