Charismatic Embeddedness: A Cultural Starting Mechanism Generating Relational Goods in an Interreligious Field. An Analysis from Algeria
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Charismatic Embeddedness: When the Social Action Is Immersed in Religious Culture
3. Is Charismatic Embeddedness Generating Relational Good in the Interreligious Field? Research Question, Theoretical Perspective and Methodology
4. The Catholic–Muslim Dialogue Promoted by the Focolare Movement in Algeria: A Case of Charismatic Embeddedness in an Interreligious Field and Its Relational Effects
4.1. The Algerian Context: A History of Conflict and Dialogue
4.2. The (Hi)story of a Catholic–Muslim Interreligious Phenomenon in Algeria Embedded in a Charismatic Culture
“But in what does this art of loving consist? First of all to love everyone indiscriminately, even Buddhists, even Muslims, even atheists; to love everyone indiscriminately: blacks, whites, men, women, small, large, Germans, Italians, Americans, South Americans. This is the first essential point. Second: love first, without expecting to be loved. Try to do this during the day with everyone you meet: at home, with the family, with the husband, with the wife, with the children, in the office, at school, in parliament; try to love first and see what comes out. Out comes the Christian revolution! Then again it consists not in the words: ‘I love you’, but in doing, in serving, which in two words is said: ‘make yourself one’ with the other, understand the other; if he suffers, suffer with him; if he enjoys, enjoy with him; if he thinks something, think with him; make yourself one with him. That is what St Paul asked, when he said to make yourself one with everyone. It is a toil, but it bears immense fruit. To make oneself one, in these two simple words lies the secret of that dialogue that can generate unity. Making oneself one that is not a tactic or an external way of doing things, it is not just an attitude of benevolence, openness, respect, or absence of judgement; it is not just bringing the poor man a little package, etc. It is certainly all that, but with something more”13.
4.3. Social Actions Embedded in a Charismatic Culture and Its Relational Effects: Main Results
With Ulysses one did not make many speeches, life was enough. We understood each other immediately, there were no problems or difficulties. One thing that always struck me was that for his brother he gave everything and forgot the rest. Even if there were other things to be done, which I considered important, for example a meeting to prepare, he always postponed everything: he was concerned about making his brother happy.
Ulysses’ love for God and the love he showed for our land was much stronger than fear and violence. To support us, he played down what was happening around us every day and he did so above all through his behavior.
We would often visit these young Christians; we would learn songs, do some chores, but the best moments were when we exchanged impressions and experiences. Then our relationships became deep, each was ready to listen and welcome the other. This led us to such an extraordinary group life that we became engrossed; each one was sure of being able to count on the others and the circle of friends grew wider each time.
Thanks to this movement I am moving forward on my journey of faith as a Muslim. […] I started to read the Koran with my heart and a vision full of love. I think that if I had read the Koran before I met the way of Clare I would have understood and interpreted it differently […] my religion has now become life and the commitment to live it in my daily life helps me to be a better Muslim. We do not experience a mixture of religions but rather these encounters strengthen each in his own religion.
There had been an attempt to each learn a prayer from the other, but then it seemed more consistent for each to remain themselves. Bahaman proved to be very open and mature, offering several times to accompany me to mass14.
I own a printing house and some time ago I started to print some publications for the Focolare. I had many hesitations, also because I am Muslim from birth. Knowing more about another religion was difficult for me, but as time went on I felt that these people work for humanity, to promote brotherhood, peace. Then I started reading the Word of Life, which every month brings Clare’s message and many experiences on how to build a united world. I came to the conclusion that all that is in our great book, the Koran, which is the path indicated by our prophet Muhammad, is the same path that Muslims and Christians have in common, and together we must take them forward”.
This is not dialogue. This is living religiously together. We are not trying to figure Christians out. We are within the community. We are already in the family, sharing everything, and that is not a problem. Dialogue is surpassed.
We forget that they are Muslims and vice versa. We are walking together on a path towards the truth, in confidence, trusting in the experience of love, of the Muslims themselves, that God is there, that we are all one, that God is bigger than all that.
Together—it is a common voice on both sides—we discover the beauty of each as a mutual gift, the commitment to live to contribute to achieving a world united in fraternity. These are moments that we live in the spirit of universal brotherhood: we experience a great joy in coming together, in sharing experiences, in discovering in an ever greater way that realizing a world of brothers and sisters is not a utopia, but a dream that can be realized, because we feel that among us it is already a reality.
5. Charismatic Embeddedness as a Cultural Starting Mechanism Generating Interreligious Relational Goods
While Christianity in Algeria was long used as a means to justify the colonial regime, various forms of settler privilege, and even the use of torture and extreme violence, it also became one important tool through which those practices could be challenged. (…) it was the individual believers who made the difference; in some cases, their choices had a global impact.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
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Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | The term charisma is used here as a synonym for “spirituality” to indicate a particular contribution to understanding the religious message in an original key to which a particular cultural perspective and a particular “way of life” is linked (Séguy 1998). |
2 | The case was recently put forward by M. Driessen in his book The Global Politics of Interreligious Dialogue: Religious Change, Citizenship, and Solidarity in the Middle East (Driessen 2023) and already studied by Callebaut (2021); Catalano (2022). |
3 | Pervillé writes: “Algeria is a human creation, the product of history. Although physical geography has provided the framework within which to inscribe its parable, it is not enough to explain it. What has generated the entity that we now call by this name is the history of the men who have inhabited and conquered it. (…) The bulk of its borders exist only on maps, geographical and mental. Nothing, in short, made it necessary for a state, let alone a power, to arise from that stretch of Mediterranean coastline. If it did, it was largely due to the colonisation of France. Of which Algeria is a North African inheritance” (Pervillé 2019, p. 51). |
4 | On 12 November 1954, at the initial moment of the Algerian rebellion against the French colonizers, French Prime Minister Mendès-France declared during a session of the French National Assembly: “One does not compromise when it comes to defending the internal peace of the nation, the unity and integrity of the Republic. The Algerian departments are part of the French Republic. They have been French for a long time, and they are irrevocably French. (…) Between them and metropolitan France there can be no conceivable secession”. |
5 | Among the assimilated, in all respects, French citizens were the so-called pieds-noirs, the Frenchmen of European descent originally from Algeria, who, depending on the political events in the country, were forced to migrate permanently to France. |
6 | The first edition of F. Fanon’s text, Les Damnés de la terre, published in 1961 in Paris (Éditions Maspero) a few days after its author’s death, soon became one of the reference texts of the Third Worldist struggle. On the reality of Algeria, in terms of repression and violence, see Thénault (2012). |
7 | On these topics, see: (Pervillé 2002; Naylor 2000, pp. 23–73; Mc Dougall 2017, op. cit., pp. 179–234; Ageron 1991, pp. 93–144; Stora 2004; Calchi Novati and Roggero 2018). |
8 | It should be noted, however, that Algeria considered 5 July to be its national liberation holiday, as it corresponded to the anniversary of the seizure of Algiers by French troops. |
9 | On the first, long phase of Arab domination, the VII–XVI centuries, see: Naylor 2009 op. cit., pp. 57–108; M. Brett, The Arab conquest and the rise of Islam in North Africa, in Fage (1979, pp. 490–555); (Hoyland 2014). |
10 | |
11 | On the experience of the monks of Tibhirine and mgr. Claverie see: (Kiser 2002; Georgeon et al. 2018; Pérennès 2000; Monge and Routhier 2018). |
12 | On this topic see: (Coda 2000; Tobler 2022). |
13 | From Speech of Chiara Lubich during WCRP Assembly, Amman 1999 (Document from the Focolare Center for Interreligious Dialogue). |
14 | From Mille musulmani intorno al focolare, p. 161 (Document from the Focolare Center for Interreligious Dialogue). |
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“Lens” from Paradigm of Gift | ||
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Social action | Motivations | obligation, freedom, interest, gratuitousness |
Logic | unconditional conditionality | |
Types of social relationships |
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Paglione, M.L.; Luppi, M. Charismatic Embeddedness: A Cultural Starting Mechanism Generating Relational Goods in an Interreligious Field. An Analysis from Algeria. Religions 2024, 15, 58. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15010058
Paglione ML, Luppi M. Charismatic Embeddedness: A Cultural Starting Mechanism Generating Relational Goods in an Interreligious Field. An Analysis from Algeria. Religions. 2024; 15(1):58. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15010058
Chicago/Turabian StylePaglione, M. Licia, and Marco Luppi. 2024. "Charismatic Embeddedness: A Cultural Starting Mechanism Generating Relational Goods in an Interreligious Field. An Analysis from Algeria" Religions 15, no. 1: 58. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15010058
APA StylePaglione, M. L., & Luppi, M. (2024). Charismatic Embeddedness: A Cultural Starting Mechanism Generating Relational Goods in an Interreligious Field. An Analysis from Algeria. Religions, 15(1), 58. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15010058