Qamar-ul Huda, Ph.D.
"Crescent and Dove: Civil Unrest and Nonviolence in the Middle East
Uprisings"

Monday, October 3rd, 2011
12:05 - 1:30 p.m.
Salomon Lecture Hall, Maher Hall
Free and open to the public
Co-sponsored by the Joan B. Kroc Institute for Peace & Justice and the Joan B. Kroc School of Peace Studies.
The popular uprisings in North African and Middle Eastern countries have
been attributed to socio-economic grievances, the lack of development,
ineffective and corrupt rule of law institutions, very little political
participation, and a burgeoning youth population with little employment
opportunities. But how has religious civil society actors and organizations
contributed to the nonviolent uprisings in Egypt, Yemen, Tunisia, Syria and in
neighboring countries? How has culture, tradition, and particular
interpretations of Islam impacted the way civil society members demand a
peaceful change to their nations? How are Islamic values of justice, freedom,
and confrontation of aggression being utilized to call for the removal of
authoritarian regimes? This talk highlighted various aspects of nonviolence
Islamic thought and practice as effective conflict resolution practices in the
Middle East.
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Qamar-ul Huda, PhD, is the scholar of Islam and senior program officer in
the Religion and Peacemaking Program at the U.S. Institute of Peace in Washington, D.C. Dr. Huda is
an adjunct associate professor at Georgetown University's Conflict Resolution
Program where he teaches religion, ethnicity, identity and conflict resolution
to graduate students. He taught Islamic studies and comparative religion at
Boston College, College of the Holy Cross and Brandeis University. Dr. Huda’s
area of interest is Islamic intellectual history, ethics, comparative religion,
the language of violence, conflict resolution and non-violence in contemporary
Islam. His edited book, The Crescent and Dove: Peace and Conflict Resolution
in Islam (USIP Press, 2010), provides a critical analysis of models of
nonviolent strategies, peace building efforts, and conflict resolution methods
in Muslim communities. His current research is on Christian-Muslim relationships
in conflict zones, and on comparative Sunni-Shi’ite interpretations of social
justice, ethics, and post-conflict reconciliation. Huda has examined the
production of religious knowledge, the diversity of religious practices and
religious thought, and peacemaking in Islam. His earlier book, Striving for
Divine Union: Spiritual Exercises for Suhrawardi Sufis (Routledge) examined
the theological, political, and social dimensions of the celebrated Suhrawardi
Sufis from Iraq to South Asia. He served as the guest editor to The Journal
of Peacebuilding and Development for the special issue on "Islam and
Peacebuilding." He served as the guest editor to The Muslim World
Journal for the special issue on “Qawwali: Politics, Poetry and
Performance.” He has published articles on comparative ethics, inter-faith
dialogue, religious peace building, rituals, and mysticism in several journals.
He earned his doctorate from UCLA in Islamic intellectual history, earned his
BA from Colgate University, and studied in Islamic seminaries overseas.