About Us
We are building interfaith America, a nation of people equipped to engage American religious diversity and interfaith bridgebuilding. Explore the latest national news coverage of our work.
Interfaith America
We are building interfaith America, a nation of people equipped to engage American religious diversity and interfaith bridgebuilding. Explore the latest national news coverage of our work.
Eboo Patel has a vision for colleges and universities embroiled in fights over race, gender, sexuality, and, more recently, the war in Gaza.
The founder and president of Interfaith America, which tries to help institutions, groups, and people find common ground, wants to make “pluralism” central to a liberal-arts education at colleges across the country.
About 140 college and university leaders gathered in Washington, D.C. on Tuesday for a conference on fostering campus pluralism in response to ongoing student conflicts over the Israel-Gaza war and rising antisemitism and Islamophobia nationwide.
The event, called “Advancing Campus Pluralism: Building Bridges Across Difference,” was hosted by Interfaith America, an organization focused on religious diversity, and the American Association of Colleges and Universities (AAC&U).
“We are striving to build a ‘potluck nation’ where all Americans bring the best of their identities to the table for a shared feast,” said Interfaith America Founder and President Eboo Patel. “Of course we will disagree on some things, but that should not prevent us from working together on other things. Team Up encourages respecting people’s diverse identities, building relationships between different communities, and cooperating on concrete projects with common aims.”
Scott G Winterton, Deseret News
Patel shared examples from the Muslim prophet Muhammad’s life of times that people of other faiths helped him, from a Christian monk to a Jewish rabbi to an ordinary pagan man.
Throughout the story of Islam, Patel said, “there is this theme: … creation is diverse, [and] diversity is sacred. And that means a special responsibility for you. I speak to compatriots in that effort.”
The nonprofit Interfaith America notes that many college campuses have opted to create interfaith rooms or centers within their facilities. Finding spaces within the community for these conversations has become much more challenging. Without a physical or virtual space where people can talk and interact, interfaith conversations – productive or unproductive – will not occur. Institutions should ask themselves: If such conversations aren’t happening in supportive spaces, where and how do we expect them to occur?
Eboo Patel is the founder and president of Interfaith America, which over the past 20 years has worked on about 1,200 campuses to narrow toxic divides and build bridges between people of all faiths or no faith. Over these decades, he has concluded that far from creating a healthier, more equitable campus, this ideology demonizes, demeans and divides students. It demeans white people by reducing them to a single category — oppressor. Meanwhile, it demeans, for example, Muslim people of color, like Patel, by reducing them to victims.
The “Faith in Elections Playbook” provides detailed instructions congregations and other religious groups can use to help bridge partisan and community divides throughout next year’s election season, according to co-developers Interfaith America and Protect Democracy.
“Now is the time to remove the walls and look at each other,” Katia Abdel Kader, a violinist from Ramallah, West Bank, told The New York Times. “The moment you just look in someone’s eyes and you understand we’re just the same – that’s what matters for me.”
Insights like those create broad ripples. They move individuals from narrow misconceptions to what Eboo Patel, president of Interfaith America, calls a framework for pluralism built of respect, empathy, and cooperation. They add up to a potential new era of peace building.
Spencer Platt/Getty Images
Eboo Patel, the founder and president of Interfaith America — an organization that works with nearly 1,000 campuses on interfaith issues — described a phone call he got from a college president who was worried that a peaceful vigil could turn violent.
His response was that colleges need to be two things right now: communities of care and cooperation. People are hurting, he adds, and words matter.
Media Inquiries
Reach out to us to set up interviews or learn more about Interfaith America’s work.
Silma Suba
Editor
Interfaith America Magazine
Media Inquiries
Eboo Patel’s publications, interviews, and appearances include the New York Times, Washington Post, and CNN, among many others.
Teri Simon
Director of Executive Office
Interfaith America
Interfaith America staff
Interfaith America staff and members of our Emerging Leaders network offer a wealth of stories and perspectives on engaging religious diversity, both on campus and beyond.
Students with the skills to treat diverse viewpoints with curiosity and respect will be prepared to navigate the complexities of the real world, say Eboo Patel and Rebecca Russo.
What does pluralism look like in practice? It looks like the Fugees soccer program and their coach, Luma Mufleh, as first documented in Warren St. Nord’s terrific book “Outcasts United.” The book isn’t new — it was published in 2009. But it offers one of the best examples I’ve found of what investing in pluralism can accomplish. Most of all, in this deeply divisive year, it offers hope.
While the animating idea behind Team Up is simple – shared service can bridge divides – the substance of the work is complex, and a challenge that constantly evolves depending on the context. But what is important about the opportunity to wrestle with these ideas is exactly what compels so many about Team Up: we chose to do this work together, in community.
We are two senior leaders at a national interfaith organization, Interfaith America, who have deep personal connections to the tragic situation in Israel and Gaza and profoundly differ in our analysis of the situation. Yet, it has also become clear where we do agree — on the importance of seeing each other and each other’s people as fully human.
Copyright @ 2024 Interfaith America. All Rights Reserved. Interfaith America is 501 (c)(3) non-profit recognized by the IRS. Tax ID Number: 30-0212534