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he World Comes to Qatar by Leo D. Lefebure Leo D. Lefebure is visiting associate professor of theology at Fordham University. This article appeared in The Christian Century, July 15, 2008, pp. 22-24. Copyright by the Christian Century Foundation; used by permission. Current articles and subscriptions information can be found at www.christiancentury.org. This material was prepared for Religion Online by Ted Brock. The Nation of
Qatar, roughly the size of Connecticut and Rhode Island, is the world's leading
producer of natural gas and has the highest per capita income of any country in
the Arab world. A few decades ago it was a tribal society with an economy based
largely on fishing, pearl harvesting and camel and horse breeding. In 1995 a
bloodless coup in which Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa deposed his father set the
stage for the modernization of the country's oil and gas industries and for
stunning economic growth. Qatar's economy grew 24 percent in 2006 alone,
according to the U.S. State Department, and its per capita income that year was
$61,540. Qatar is on track to become the wealthiest nation (on a per capita
basis) in the world. The vast
majority of Qatar's population lives in or around the capital city of Doha.
Qatari citizens have benefited enormously from the economic boom, but they are
a small minority in their own country, roughly 20 percent. The majority of the
inhabitants are expatriates who come to Qatar to work--from other Arab nations,
from India, Pakistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka and the Philippines, and from the West. Qatar, which
became independent from Great Britain in 1971, has long been ruled by the
Al-Thani family. The emir, selected from within that family, rules in
accordance with Shari'a law and in consultation with members of his and other
leading families, though some moves have been made toward having elections and
a more parliamentary form of government. In 1992, following the war in Kuwait,
Qatar signed a defense agreement with the United States which allowed the U.S.
to build in Qatar its largest military base in the Middle East and the
headquarters for CENTCOM, the U.S. Central Command for the Middle East. Sheikh Hamad, as
Qatar's current emir, has introduced many changes, including a certain amount
of freedom of the press and of religion. Al-Jazeera, a broadcasting company
that is viewed as the freest in the Arab world, was established in 1997. Its
broadcasts are often critical of other governments in the area, but not of
Qatar. In March a Catholic church opened in Doha; while there were various
places of Christian worship previously, this was the first building in
centuries to be erected as a Christian church in the country. Significantly, it
does not display the cross on any of its outer walls. Plans are being made for
a Greek Orthodox church, an Anglican church, a Coptic church, and a church for
Christian traditions from India, which will also include a space for
nondenominational worship. Not all Qataris
are pleased with such openings to Christianity. Most of the country's citizens
adhere to Islam's conservative Wahhabi movement. In the Islamic tradition,
there is a hadith in which Muhammad says that Christians should not be allowed
in the holy areas. Some Qatari Muslims believe that this principle should apply
to the entire Arabian Peninsula, including Qatar. A vigorous debate in the
local press took place over the building of the Catholic church, and worries
were expressed about a possible violent protest. When Georgetown University's
Qatar branch tried to import Christian Bibles for one of its theology courses,
the Bibles were held up at customs for six weeks until the ministry of
education was able to confirm that they were intended for educational purposes
at the university. Yet in other
ways openness to the West is part of Qatar's agenda. The Qatar Foundation, a
nonprofit organization founded by the emir, is inviting applications for
membership in the Qatar Symphony Orchestra. In February, Placido Domingo came
to sing with the German orchestra of Baden-Baden. An aura of
artificiality envelops many things in Doha. The shopping mall Villaggio is
built as a replica of Venice, with gondoliers waiting to take shoppers for a
ride along a canal that goes past the shops toward an ice skating rink. Above
the mall's entrance are murals depicting Venetian architecture. Adding to the
city's artificiality is the fact that most of the expatriates have little
contact with Qataris or with Islamic culture. And most of the
buildings--largely constructed since the early 1990s--follow modern Western
architectural styles. Education is a
realm in which Qatar has invested a great deal in opening itself to the West.
Since the 1980s, the country's leaders have been concerned about the quality of
the educational system and its ability to prepare students for contemporary
economic and social life. It is in this rapidly changing context that the
2,500-acre Education City was founded in 1997. Its Web site offers this rationale:
"Qatar Foundation understands that the future of Qatar and the region
depends on well-educated citizens, actively engaged in the international
marketplace of ideas, creating and finding uses for new knowledge. At Qatar
Foundation, we believe that today's investments in education will make Qatar a
hub of innovative education and cutting-edge research, ensuring Qatar's
prosperity far into the future." Three years ago
Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., set up in Qatar a branch of its
School of Foreign Service. Georgetown is one of several U.S. universities that
have established a campus in the country. Virginia Commonwealth teaches
communication design, fashion design and interior design; Carnegie Mellon
University Qatar, business and computer science; Texas A & M University at
Qatar, chemical, electrical, mechanical and petroleum engineering; Weill
Cornell Medical College in Qatar, premedical and medical studies leading to the
M.D. degree. Next year Northwestern University will begin teaching journalism
in the country. These are not traditional study-abroad centers for American
students but rather campuses of the home university that offer full-degree
programs Students at the
Georgetown School of Foreign Service-Qatar are mostly Sunni Muslims, along with
some Shi'a Muslims, Christians, Hindus and Baha'is. As a Jesuit university,
Georgetown requires undergraduates to take two courses in theology. I've
encountered more energy in these classes than in any others I've taught.
Students are eager to learn about religions other than their own, and their
discussions of religious differences can move quickly into emotional disputes,
with Sunni students vigorously criticizing Shi'a students, or more traditional
students vehemently rejecting the views of more progressive students. I have
heard anti-Jewish and anti-Catholic comments. In one class discussion, a Hindu
student insisted that Hinduism is monotheistic; to demonstrate her point, she
read a text of the Bhagavad Gita in Sanskrit, then translated and commented on
it. In class, no other students disagreed with her, but afterward, outside of
class, she was accosted and harshly criticized. To some students, Hinduism must
be condemned as polytheistic. The classroom
also offers remarkable moments of interreligious exchange, as when a Hindu
student queries a Muslim classmate about various aspects of the Islamic
tradition, and vice versa. Muslim students are quite sensitive to the negative
images of Islam that prevail in the West. Even students who are critical of other
traditions appear interested in discussions of interreligious dialogue and the
role of religion in peacemaking. One student told
me that in her earlier schooling she had absorbed extremely negative attitudes
toward all other religions and that the Georgetown courses were her first
opportunity to learn about other traditions in a more open-minded atmosphere.
Some Muslims have accused her and others of being infidels because of their
more benign attitudes toward other religions. A Baha'i student recalled her
earlier sense of fear that people would attack her for following a different
religious tradition; she appreciates the atmosphere at Georgetown, in which
students can talk openly about different religions. Another student noted that
learning about other religions can go two ways; it can strengthen one's faith
or it can weaken it. In my course
World Religions Today, students read a book on the place of women in various
religious traditions. In reference to this topic, one Qatari Muslim student
noted that people in the West frequently accuse Islam of having negative
attitudes toward women. She said that in reading the book she had learned that
the treatment of women is a problem everywhere and that the real problem is not
religion but rather the various cultures that mistreat women. I invited a
Conservative Jewish woman who is studying to be a rabbi to speak to one class.
The students, most of whom were female, were amazed and delighted at the
opportunity to converse with her. A number of students commented that they had
no idea that a woman could study to be a rabbi in any form of Judaism. And at
least in the class discussion, none of the common anti-Jewish attitudes that
circulate in the Arab world surfaced. One student said
that in my course The Problem of God, she had been scared that she would be
attacked if she questioned Islam. A Shi'a student acknowledged that she felt
the same way around Sunni Muslims, who view her as an infidel. A fair amount of
religious intolerance circulates through Qatari primary and secondary schools.
Students at Georgetown are the only ones in Qatar with the opportunity to study
theology and comparative religion in the context of a university that has a
major commitment to interreligious understanding. However difficult the conversations
and conflicts may be at the school, our hope is to shape a hospitable
atmosphere for exploring religious differences and building healthy religious
communities. An old adage of
Catholic scholasticism says: whatever is received is received according to the
mode of the recipient. This principle is played out weekly at Georgetown's
campus in Doha, as teachers from one cultural and religious context send
messages to students from very different backgrounds. Communication does take
place, but always with a difference that may not be visible for some time. The
project of Western education in Doha is a significant experiment whose results
will be fully known only in the years and decades to come. At the beginning
of my course The Problem of God, the class studied a book about encountering
God in Judaism. One day a student from Saudi Arabia approached me and said that
previously he had known nothing about Jews except what he had been taught in
his country--that they are all evil. He added that he did not share that view.
I thanked God for this opening for more conversation. Toward the end
of the semester the class watched the movie Monsieur Ibrahim, in which an elderly Muslim gentleman in Paris (played by
Omar Sharif) befriends a Jewish teenage boy. During the course of their
developing friendship, the older man gives the boy his copy of the Qur'an,
which contains pressed flowers. On the day we viewed the film, the Saudi
student asked me if he could keep the Bible that the school had lent to him. I
told him that the Bible was not mine to give, but that I would happily give him
my own copy of the Bible if he came to my office the next day. When I gave him
the Bible, I thought of the movie we had seen together and wondered about the
experience that this young man would have, moving beyond his upbringing to an
engagement with the world's religious heritage. |