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CANADIAN LIVING
SALUTES:
Raheel
Raza
for forging
bonds - and friendships - between faiths
By
Christine
Langlois
Humanity is one community." It's a line from the Qur'an that
Raheel Raza holds dear.
And it's a belief that drives this Muslim woman's mission, which
is to start a conversation among people of all faiths so we can
understand and respect the beliefs of others. Raheel's day job is
at the Ontario Heritage Foundation in Toronto, but she's also a
passionate volunteer who calls herself an "interfaith
advocate."
To get people talking, she writes for newspapers and magazines,
and speaks across Ontario.
Facing tough audiences
Raheel has put herself in front of some tough audiences. But an
invitation to speak at St. Paul's Catholic High School in Niagara
Falls, Ont., was particularly daunting. The gym was full of Grade
9 kids. "I know what a challenging stage this age is, and
they were such a large group," she says.
"I was so nervous I took my older son Saif [then 19] for
moral support."
Raheel talked about the main beliefs of Islam and some of its
similarities to Christianity, then she told the kids they could
ask her absolutely anything. After a long silence, she appealed
for questions again. Finally a boy at the back raised his hand:
"How many wives does your husband have?" he asked.
Dumbfounded, Raheel felt her son bristling at the boy's ignorance
and the challenge in the question. Realizing that if she didn't
keep her sense of humour, she was finished, she laughed gently and
said: "One, as far as I know. But if I hear of any more I'll
get back to you." The kids laughed and the teachers' jaws
unclenched. In the Qur'an this rare practice of marrying more than
one woman, she explained, had been deemed permissible during times
of war as a way of protecting the widows and orphans. Comfortable
that they really could ask anything, her audience peppered her
with more questions.
Building interfaith relations
As a child in Pakistan, Raheel had little notion of other faiths.
Then, when she was a young married woman, she and her husband,
Sohail, moved to Dubai and got to know people from all over the
globe. But it wasn't until the family immigrated to Toronto in
1989, that she discovered people of different faiths working to
share ideas and build understanding. Raheel dived right in.
She fired off a piece to the Toronto Star newspaper, in favour of
keeping the Lord's Prayer in the local public schools. The city
was embroiled in the debate, so the headline above her column --
Muslim in Favour of the Lord's Prayer -- got attention. Soon TV
and radio stations were calling, asking Raheel to talk about her
beliefs and her views on why all religious expression should be
encouraged.
Now the director of interfaith affairs for the Christian
organization, SnowStar Institute of Religion, Raheel searches out
people from all faiths who will get out there and talk to others,
as she does. This kind of discourse is the only path to true peace
among nations, peoples and religions, she believes.
"Everybody has a story to tell and I find those stories
fascinating," she says.
Raheel's work has taken on more urgency. Five days after the World
Trade Center fell, Raheel stood in St. James-Bond United Church in
Toronto facing a "very quiet, very reserved"
congregation. Her topic: When we come to Canada as immigrants,
should we bring our battles with us? She knew the traumatized
parishioners wanted to understand what it meant to be Muslim and,
as she spoke, her audience thawed and the questions flowed. |