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News

(Deutsch) Migration – afrikanische und europäische Perspektiven

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Ethical Reflections for Tanzania

The universal Social Doctrine of the Church only comes to life when local people and groups put it into practice. We are excited to present an example: “Ethical Reflections”, edited by Fr. Vic Missiaen, chaplain of the Christian Professionals of Tanzania. This group pursues the idea of rebuilding the moral foundations of their home society and country. “Ethical Reflections” does not offer final answers, but it contains a kaleidoscope of ideas about which the Christian Professionals of Tanzania want to enter into dialogue with other groups in Tanzanian society.

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Tolerance in Conflict

An interview with Prof. Dr. Markus Vogt and Mr. Rolf Husmann

Professor Markus Vogt, Chairman of the Advisory Board of Ordo Socialis, has initiated a project at the University of Uzhgorod on scientific reflection and the social promotion of tolerance. Among our cooperation partners is Dr. Alexander Bokotey, Director of the Institute for Ecology and Religion in Uzhgorod and a member of our Advisory Board. Against the background of the current conflict with Russia, this is a highly exciting project. We talked about this with Prof. Vogt and his assistant Rolf Husmann. Arnd Küppers asked the questions.

Dear Markus, you have initiated a project “Tolerance at the Borders of Europe”, which is realized in cooperation with the University of Uzhgorod and the Institute for Ecology and Religion which is located there. The first sequence of this project has just been successfully completed. How did this cooperation come about and what is the intention of the project?

Vogt: It was in 2000 that I met the Ukrainian counterparts in connection with my commitment at the counsel of the European Bishop’s Conference. Our common interest was to promote ecological and social responsibility. Since my early years at university I was very much interested in the chances and difficulties of a post-sovietic country on its path towards a free and plural society as well as in the role of the church in those countries. After many ecological projects and after having founded the institute “Ecology and Religion” at the National University of Uzhgorod that is dealing with these subjects I got suddenly a phone call from the Foreign Ministry. They knew about my projects and suggested that my partners in Ukraine and I could support scientifically a project dealing with civil conflict resolution. He was convinced that the churches and social ethics could play an important role. That piqued my interest.

During this project you and your assistant Rolf Husmann drafted the concept of proactive tolerance. What is special and innovative about this concept of tolerance and the social-ethical approach based on it?

Husmann: Using the term proactive tolerance we want to highlight a new dimension of tolerance. Many times tolerance has been understood as mere acceptance of different behaviors, meanings and characteristics. That is cutting it short. Although the UN is using the term active tolerance, this does not cover all aspects of the term. The promotion of tolerance by civil commitment for liberty of speech, fair rules in society etc. are important aspects. We think nevertheless that tolerance is acting proactively on society as an attitude of appreciation and of trust allow a change of mind. Being different does not mean a threat to anyone anymore. Being different is not a flaw, but a value that promotes interest and openness and the will to learn something new. This is contributing to an atmosphere of respect. This is what you may call innovative speaking about our concept.

Ukraine is a country whose territorial integrity has been massively threatened by Russia since 2014. We have experienced the unlawful annexation of the Crimea, and people still die every day in the irregular war of so-called separatists, who are supported and driven by Russia in Eastern Ukraine. Are we German social ethicists not making it too easy for ourselves to recommend an attitude and policy of tolerance to the Ukrainians in such a situation?

Vogt: We have experienced that the project met with some mistrust at first. But there wasn’t a reason for doubt. We made very clear that we take the conflict serious. It would be way too easy if we banalized the conflict what we did not do and our partners quickly understood that we did not do. Tolerance is a term of conflict that means that tolerance becomes relevant and visible when there is a real conflict that makes us differentiate between situation in which tolerance is a demand of justice and others in which democracy has to be defended. Indifference is in no way tolerance! The Russia-Ukraine-conflict is therefore a challenge to define the confines of tolerance. To make it crystal-clear: The aggressions by Russia must not be played down and can never be tolerated. But there is also a “afterwards” and we should take it into mind.

In recent years, intolerance and resentment have noticeably increased in Germany, especially in connection with the disputes over migration and multiculturalism. Can we Germans learn something from the Ukrainian example about coexistence in religious and cultural diversity?

Husmann: Quite a lot. Ukraine has been a melting pot of cultures and religions for centuries. Ukraine and especially Transcarpathia have always been profiting from diversity. This can be seen in the cultural and economical wealth during the period of the Austrian-Hungarian reign. Even today Ukraine is a learning-place for Western Europeans in matters of tolerance. Tolerance, social exchange between groups and religions play an important role in Ukraine’s everyday life. Moreover, they created institutionalized forums for their communication. Having said that we do not describe ourselves as exporters of Western culture but as learners that enjoy participating in a dialogue between East and West.

In their paper “Proactive tolerance as a way to peace” Prof. Dr. Markus Vogt and Rolf Husmann outline the theoretical framework of the project.

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(Deutsch) Christliche Sozialethik und Gender-Debatte

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Peacemaking in East Asia

Ms. Dr. HyunJu Shim

Unlike Europe, the Korean peninsula is still in the Cold War. For this reason the following paper on peace ethics, written by a Korean theologian and social ethicist, is highly relevant. Ahn Junggeun was a Korean independence activist, who was sentenced to death for assassinating Japanese Prime Minister Ito Hirobumi in 1909. In Korea and China he is revered as a resistance fighter against Japanese imperialism. But especially since the discovery of his Treatise of Peace in East Asia and his autobiography in the 1970s, both texts written in prison and unfinished, he is also regarded as a visionary for peace, international understanding and multilateral order. Ms. Dr. HyunJu Shim, senior researcher at the Institute for Life and Culture at the Sogang University in Seoul and member of our scientific advisory board has written an essay on Ahn Junggeun’s ideas and parallels with peace ethics in Catholic social teaching.

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A wall is a sign of weakness

Fr. Martin Schlag (Copyright: Univerity of Saint Thomas)

An interview with Fr. Martin Schlag

Fr. Martin Schlag, born 1964 in New York but Austrian in origin, served ten years as Professor of Moral Theology and Social Ethics in Rome. Since 2017 he has been the director of the John A. Ryan Institute for Catholic Social Thought at the University of St. Thomas in Saint Paul. In times of growing political tensions between the USA and Europe, we wanted to know how he felt as an Austrian in America and what the situation of church and society on the other side of the Atlantic was like. A conversation about similarities and differences between Europeans and Americans, about capitalism and the social market economy, about walls and open hearts. The questions were asked by Arnd Küppers.  

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