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  Monday  March 10  2003    12: 57 AM

fundamentalism

Fundmentalism is something that I have had a real hard time understanding. It's not something I can relate to at all. Fellow traveller Joseph Duemer grew up with fundamentalism. His comments on this help me understand it — a little. It doesn't make me any less fearfull.

A working definition of fundamentalism:
Karen Armstrong's take on religion has previously struck me as conventional, if liberal; but here she provides us with a good basic view of fundamentalism across religious practices. In the two years since George Bush assumed the presidency, I've gone back & forth between believing he is a sincere Christian fundamentalist or that he uses Christian doctrines to rationalize his political beliefs & ambitions.
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Cries of Rage and Frustration
by Karen Armstrong

Fundamentalists of all faiths have convinced themselves that militant piety is the only way to save religion from annihilation in an increasingly secularised world. If we are to stand any chance of beating terrorists after the attacks on the United States, we must try to understand their motivation and fears.

This is not a centuries-old phenomenon. Fundamentalism actually began in the US early in the 20th century. Today, it is by no means confined to the Muslim world, but has erupted in every major faith as a reaction against rational, secular modernity. It did not become widespread in the Islamic world until a degree of modernisation had been achieved in the late 1960s, after secular solutions such as nationalism or socialism seemed to have failed.
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