EXPLORING SACRED SPACE IN DIVIDED SOCIETIES: CAPE TOWN AND HAMBURG

  • Gordon Mitchell University of Hamburg Germany

Abstract

Peace-building and religious dialogue projects are increasingly experimenting with intercultural encounters in places such as mosques, churches or synagogues. It is assumed that such places have particular value for at least one of the parties and it is therefore anticipated that mutual visits will foster understanding and respect. It is customary to assume that first-hand exposure to other religions in the form of visits to mosques or churches, is an important means of developing cognitive as well as affective inter-religious competence. Opportunities to experience awe then become the task of Religious Education. Common to much of the literature on the subject is an almost essentialistic understanding of sacred space, which invests particular buildings with meaning. This article argues that what happens during such visits is even more complex. Space is sacred because people invest in it with meaning and this can happen in ways which are both fluid and fraught with inner contradiction. Encountering that space can therefore have a range of unanticipated consequences. Two initiatives where school pupils are encouraged to explore sacred space, one in Cape Town and one in Hamburg, will form the basis of this analysis.

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Published
2013-06-12
Section
Articles