Alp Ataizi
As Pacifica Institute we have started a new interview series with prominent leaders of today's society. To launch the series, we sat down to enjoy an enlightening conversation with Rev. Alexei R. Smith, Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs Officer for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, to speak about interfaith dialogue. Rev. Smith is one of the very first interfaith activists on interfaith dialogue in the Los Angeles area and has paved the way in this meaningful cause.
As Pacifica Institute we have started a new interview series with prominent leaders of today's society. To launch the series, we sat down to enjoy an enlightening conversation with Rev. Alexei R. Smith, Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs Officer for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, to speak about interfaith dialogue. Rev. Smith is one of the very first interfaith activists on interfaith dialogue in the Los Angeles area and has paved the way in this meaningful cause.
Father
Alexei served as an elected member of the Council of Priests of the Archdiocese
of Los Angeles for six years, serving as Vice President of the Council and
Chair of the Priestly Life and Ministry Committee for the last two years of his
service on the Council.
In November of 2000, Cardinal Roger Mahony appointed Father Alexei to a five year term as Ecumenical and Interreligious Officer of the Archdiocese, and reappointed him to a second five year term in July 2006.
In November of 2000, Cardinal Roger Mahony appointed Father Alexei to a five year term as Ecumenical and Interreligious Officer of the Archdiocese, and reappointed him to a second five year term in July 2006.
Father Alexei served as president of the
Interreligious Council of Southern California for five years and is the
recipient of numerous commendations and awards: in 2007 he was awarded the
prestigious Religious Leadership Award of the Valley Interfaith Council.
Interfaith dialog means at it differs from what we term as Ecumenical dialog. Ecumenical dialog means our interaction with our fellow
Christians. Interfaith would mean our interaction with people who are non-Christian
and the goals are different. In the
sense they are the same, but different.
In ecumenical dialog with our fellow Christians, the goal is to reunite
all Christians into one entity as we were originally. Interfaith dialog does
not have the same goal, the goal is to be enriched by each other, to embrace
each other with open your arms. What are
you doing you are making room in yourself for the other individual. Interfaith dialog for me is the embrace of
one another, making room in myself for the other and to be enriched by the other.
In order to be enriched by one another we will acknowledge that we don’t share total
beliefs but we don’t allow those areas to impede our working together for the
betterment of society.
Q. How did you first get involved in interfaith dialog?
Oh (laugh), I was assigned this job in the year 2000. The Catholic Arch bishop here took me aside
one day and said, ‘I have a new job I want you to do’. And I knew nothing about
this. He said, ‘we are looking for new
ecumenical interreligious officer for the archdiocese. Everybody tells me it should be you. So if
you want the job I’m telling you it’s yours.’ I was totally shocked, I had no
idea this was coming and I immediately asked the Archbishop, ‘your eminence, who
is telling you this?’, ‘Oh don’t worry about it’ and I said, ‘You know I have
no academic background in this, I didn’t study any of these world religions and
I have no degree in this stuff’, ‘Don’t worry about that stuff’. Every excuse I made he said ‘Don’t worry’ and
finally I said, ‘I would like to think about this, pray about this and can I
get back to you?’. He said, ‘Yes you
may.’ I’ll never forget that was in a
Wednesday and on Friday his secretary called and said the cardinal has a
message for you. I said, ‘And what’s
that?’, ‘he wants to know if you have finished praying and whether you can
start on Monday. And I took that as a
sign that I should engage in this work and I am still thankful that I did. I have been now at this position since the
year 2000, so next month is my 14th year and it’s made a total
difference in the way it’s really enriched my life.
Perfect. Let me
ask you about the interfaith community.
How has the interfaith community changed over the years? Has it
progressed?
Yes. That is not to
say that we have not had setbacks, but it is to say that we have
progressed. I believe we are for the
most part understanding one another better, excepting one another better more
and growing together.
Well look at where we live here in Los Angeles. We have absolutely every religion here, from
A to Z. From the Armenian Orthodox to Zoroastrians.
And I think Los Angeles is known for it being a city that many other cities of
the world like to model. I mean look at the entertainment industry, all of
these things. But I think and I told our
mayors this, we should be exporting to
these people is the fact that we can live together, people of different
ethnicities, colors, races and religions but we can live together
harmoniously. And this is what we have
to show the world with.
And Los Angeles is the
perfect platform, the perfect place for this.
Q.What are some
of the, if there are any, unexpected challenges that you have come across in
your work?
I think the main one for me, speaking as a catholic now,
that not all of our people are 100% behind this. Even though this is the
official teaching of the Catholic Church, it has been since the 2nd
Vatican council in 1960’s. For we
acknowledge there is truth in non-Christian religions, where we are told by the
church that we should interact with other religions, all of these things. Not all of our people are there yet. So we
have to work on them and try to bring them along.
Q.This
actually connects to my second question which is, Why do you think some people
do not believe in interfaith? Is it because they don’t really see it succeeding
or do you think they might be some restrictions in their religion that would
not permit them engaging?
I think it is the opposite of what you said initially. I think they do see it as succeeding and it challenged
them because that would mean they would have to change. They don’t want to change. They want to possess the idea that we are the
sole possessor of the truth, nobody else has anything to offer society, no
possible feedback that they learn from you, that type of mentality that is
certainly faulty reasoning. I mean look
at the world, those areas that live in isolation out there and you can see that
it is not working. Well Francis now is a light for us, for the whole world, as almost everything
he says in his official statements says he always mentions that we have to take
inter-religious dialog deeper, not superficially or ‘hello, nice to see you
again’ type of thing, but really delve into this whole realm of what makes you
a Muslim, what make me a Catholic, what we can share together. How we can work together to build a society.
Q. What do you think is
the biggest challenge that we have, that we haven’t passed yet? The biggest
challenge that we have to build these bridges?
Well I think for many people it would be fear. Fear of the unknown. They don’t know and we do a lot of education
programs. Pacifica has all kinds of
educational programs, some of which I have been able to attend and they are
wonderful. Just like we do, the Catholic
Church does a number of programs that our parish and such that we try to
educate people about things that. And we
have to continue doing that, we have to continue throwing these seeds. Some of these seeds will germinate and they
will grow to great trees and produce a lot of fruit, other will wither and
die. But it is the fear factor that of
what people just don’t know. Let me give
you an example of what I mean. I occasionally
put together what I call Father Alexi’s bus tour, where we gather at one of our
catholic facilities through our parish here.
We gather at one of these parishes, we begin with morning prayer and a
Christian tradition other than Catholic, so that they are exposed to some other
type of Christianity than Catholicism and then we go and visit four, maybe
sometimes five houses of worship of different faith and I never tell these
people where we are going. Just go. And
I remember once distinctly we pulled into the parking lot then of Omar Ibn
Al’Kattab mosque down there by the University (USC) and as we got off a lady
grabbed my arm and said, ‘Oh I am so thankful you brought us here’ and I said
‘Why is that?’, and she said ‘because I live down the street, I have always
wanted to go in here, but I haven’t’. And I said ‘Well why didn’t you go in?’,
she said ‘Well I am afraid, I am afraid of the unknown, I am afraid that they
won’t accept me or I will do something that will offend them or I won’t accept
them or I won’t know how to behave or whatever’, so I said ‘Well, my dear, you
just stick with me and we will walk you through this’. And we did and I watched her while she was
there and as we walked out she grabbed my arm again and said ‘Well that was
wonderful, I should have been in here a long time ago. These people are just
like us.’ So once you get people to take a leap over there initial fear of
something unknown you have a chance.
That was a great
story. I can relate to that one in
different ways as well. Sometimes you
need that hand…
Q. Let me tie this all
together with my last question about Pacifica.
What is your experience with Pacifica Institute and Hizmet in general?
I’ll never forget that Ensar called and you weren’t Pacifica
then, you were Global Cultural Connections, and he called and wanted to know whether
he can come and talk with me. It wasn’t
just Ensar it was Ibrahim and a couple of other gentlemen and I said ‘Okay, I
have a half hour’. They came and we had
such wonderful conversation that I cancelled some other appointments and we must
have talked for two and a half hours our first day. And they were very interested in becoming
active in the interfaith scene here. I gave him some contacts and took him around to a couple of
places. We had a long association with now
Pacifica and I think it is wonderful and what you are doing in marvelous. It is not only exposing people to Turkish
culture and such, but also to a positive face of not only Islam but also a
positive face to interfaith relations.
So I commend you and have commended you.
You have been gracious enough to invite me to come and speak at some of
your Friendship Dinners not only here in Los Angeles, but in Hawaii once and
where else, Reno I think and maybe someplace else. And I am more than willing to do that because
I admire the work that you are doing and I certainly support that. With the Hizmet organization per see or
movement, I am admirer of Mr. Gulen. I
have read several of the books he has written, articles about him. I think he represents a positive future which
should be emulated, his activities should be emulated in many different parts of
the world, especially the Islamic world. This openness to the other, never
denying who he is or what he is. I never
deny that I am a Catholic or Catholic Priest, no one has asked me to do that in
order to participate in interfaith dialog. Interfaith Dialog is certainly not
about going out and trying to convert one to another religion. It’s growing in understanding and such, you
maintain your identity while working together in making it a better world and
that is the true sense for it.
Father Alexi thank you
very much for your time.
2 comments:
This is wonderful that Fr. Alexei Smith was interviewed about this most important topic, for all Religions bring to the table of dialogue their unique historic and cultural riches. When genuine sharing generates joy for the participants and mutual respect then the whole community benefits. I had the great honor of working beside Fr. Smith for several years in the 1990's and he is very worthy of the esteem and honors that have arrived at his doorstep. May his work and the endeavors of Pacifica Institute gain momentum leading us toward greater mutual understanding, tolerance, and harmony. Al Burnham
I have admired the efforts of Pacifica Institute to invest in interfaith dialogue and I know Fr. Smith personally. A great interview and good reflection to share with others.
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