In more than 20 years of participating in interfaith dialogue, guest lecturer Dr. Mohammad Shomali has travelled widely. He is the director of international affairs at Jamiâat al-Zahra, a Shiâa Islam seminary for women, as well as director of the International Institute for Islamic Studies (IIIS). He resides in Qom, Iran.
âI feel at home in many places in the world,â Shomali said, âbut 91´óÉń is one of those places where I really feel at home.â
Peace and peacebuilding, along with interfaith dialogue, is one of the core Quranic principles, Shomali says. This was one reason why nine female seminarians from Jamiâat al-Zahra studied at SPI this summer, escorted by Shomali and his wife, Mahnaz Heidarpour, who also teaches at the seminary. In prior years, SPI has hosted a total of 10 students from Iran, but never a group of this size all at once.
Interactions with SPI students from around the world provide a practical complement to required seminary coursework in comparative peace studies, Shomali said. âTheoretical knowledge can come through books, but when the students eat and talk together and go to churches, this is different. They learn about the way people think, live, behave, and plan. This is very valuable.â
The Iranian women praised the interactive style of teaching at SPI, where lengthy lectures are rare and role-playing is common.
âWe do lots of exercises, many projects, in this class,â said Sabereh Ahmadi Movaghar, referring to âLeadership for Healthy Organizationsâ taught as a seven-day intensive by David Brubaker, PhD, and Roxann âRoxyâ Allen Kioko â04, MA â07. She also took âFaith-based Peacebuilding,â taught by Roy Hange, a Mennonite scholar and pastor.
Movagharâs home institution, Jamiat al-Zahra, is the worldâs largest Islamic seminary for women, with 5,000 Iranian students, 1,000 international students and 10,000 enrolled in distance learning. The nine students at SPI are all linked to the postgraduate section of the seminaryâs international department.
âThese women are excellent, diligent students,â said J. Daryl Byler, executive director of 91´óÉńâs Center for Justice and Peacebuilding. âThey are devoutly religious as well as delightful â with great personalities, warm laughs, and deep insights. The friendships being built are priceless.â
Shomali told an 91´óÉń reporter that he hoped for better relations between the people of Iran and people of the United States and noted similarities between Quranic and Christian teachings about the importance of peace. âGod says about the Quran in the Quran itself that God guides with the Quran those who seek His pleasure to the ways of peace (5:15).â There are âlots of things we can learn from each other,â he added. Iranians are rational people and âwhen you are rational, you tend to dialogue with people of other faiths and other cultures.â
Shomali welcomed more exchanges of Americans and Iranians from a variety of fields, including artists and professionals. He said that to reduce mutual misperceptions and encourage peace, âNothing can replace face-to-face encounters. Our first Imam, Imam Ali, is quoted as saying: âPeople become hostile towards what they donât know.ââ
â Lauren Jefferson and Bonnie Price Lofton