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Religion

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Title: Religion


1
Religion
  • The Way it was
  • The Way it is
  • The Way it will be

2
The Five World Religions
  • Christianity
  • Islam
  • Judaism
  • Hinduism
  • Buddhism

3
Christianity
  • Most widespread religion in the world
  • Present in the USA, Canada, South America,
    Australia, and England, among others
  • Various forms exist including Roman Catholic,
    Lutheran, Methodist, Baptist

4
Christianitys Beliefs
  • Originated as a cult, propelled by Jesus,
    Himself
  • Monotheism-belief in a single divine power
  • Trinity unique version of the Supreme Being
    God, Jesus Christ, and the Holy Spirit
  • Believe in a final judgement by God

5
Judaism
  • Something less than a world religion with only 15
    million followers around the world
  • Only in Israel do Jews represent the national
    majority
  • USA has largest concentration of Jews (6
    million)
  • 3 main denominations Orthodox, Reform, and
    Conservative Jews

6
Judaism Beliefs
  • Covenant special relationship with God by which
    Jews became the chosen people.
  • Regard Old Testament as a record of their history
    and a statement of the duties of Jewish life
  • Emphasizes moral behavior on earth

7
Hinduism
  • Oldest of all world religions
  • 14 of all humanity are Hindus
  • Remains an Eastern Religion, located in India,
    Pakistan,Indonesia, and South Africa
  • Not linked to the life of a single person

8
Hinduism Beliefs
  • Dharma moral force in the universe that gives
    everyone responsibilities
  • Karma a belief in the spiritual process f the
    human soul
  • All actions have spiritual consequences
  • Reincarnation
  • No judgement by supreme being, only when a soul
    reaches Moksha (spiritual perfection) will it not
    be reborn

9
Buddhism
  • 350 million Buddhists (6 of people)
  • Located in Thailand, Cambodia, Japan, India, and
    China
  • Resembles Hinduism in doctrine, but stems from
    the life of one person, Buddha

10
Buddhist Beliefs
  • Believe much of life involves suffering
  • Must transcend materialism through meditation to
    achieve Nirvana, spiritual enlightenment and
    peace
  • No judgement by a supreme being, but every action
    has spiritual consequences
  • Reincarnation
  • Enlightenment frees a person from suffering

11
Islam
  • The majority of people in the Middle East are
    Muslims
  • 1.2 billion followers (20 of humanity)
  • Follow the teachings of Muhammad-a prophet, not a
    divine being

12
Islam Beliefs
  • Quran word of God transmitted through
    Muhammad--submission to Allah as the path to
    inner peace
  • 5 Pillars of Islam
  • 1. Allah is one true God, Muhammad his messenger.

  • 2. Ritual prayer
  • 3. Give alms to the poor.
  • 4. Fast during Ramadan
  • 5. Pilgrimage at least once to Mecca

13
Islam Beliefs
  • Final judgement by God
  • Muslims must defend their faith--holy wars
    (jihad) against nonbelievers.
  • Many countries recently have tried to rid their
    society of morally wrong Western influences

14
Historical Religious Conflict
15
Crusades
  • Roman Catholic Christianity vs. Turks Muslim
  • 1095 A.D.- 1099 A.D.
  • Palestine and Israel (Mainly the Jerusalem
    region)
  • Pope Urban II called for the Christians of Europe
    to battle the Muslims and regain Jerusalem for
    Christianity

16
Aftermath of Crusades
  • Europeans carved out four states in Palestine
  • Many castles and fortresses were built to protect
    the states from Muslim forces.
  • The Muslims gradually recaptured the territory,
    and European presence in Palestine ended in 1291.

  • These events would later come back to hurt
    relations in the future between these peoples.

17
Balkans
  • The Balkan states saw in the Turkish revolution
    of 1908-1909 and the Italo-Turkish War of
    1911-1912 an opportunity to retaliate against the
    Turks, their former oppressors.
  • The Balkan Alliance won a series of decisive
    victories over the Turks during the next two
    months, forcing them to relinquish Albania,
    Macedonia, and practically all their other
    holdings in southeast Europe

18
Balkans
  • Representatives of the belligerents and the major
    European powers met in London to decide the
    Balkan question.
  • The Turks rejected the peace conditions demanded
    by the Balkan states, and the conference
  • Another peace conference, with the major European
    powers again acting as mediators, met at London
    on May 20. By the terms of the Treaty of London,
    concluded on May 30, the Turks ceded the island
    of Crete to Greece and relinquished all
    territories in Europe west of a line between the
    Black Sea
  • The Treaty of London created friction among the
    Balkan allies, especially between Serbia and
    Bulgaria. Among the causes of the friction was
    the Bulgarian refusal to recognize the Serbian
    claim to certain Bulgarian-held portions of
    Macedonia. In addition, Serbia was resentful
    because it failed to obtain territory along the
    Adriatic Sea.

19
Balkans Impact
  • The Balkan Wars profoundly influenced the
    European history. They created a strong and
    ambitious Serbia, and anti-Serbian sentiment in
    neighboring Austria-Hungary.
  • These conditions greatly insured conflict having
    severely damaged European alliances and helped
    kindle the volatile conditions that led to the
    outbreak of World War I.

20
Palestinian Conflict
  • Throughout history Palestine, located on the
    eastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea, was
    conquered many times by invaders
  • The Arab-Israeli Conflict is based mostly a
    20th-century conflict between Arabs and Jews in
    the Middle East over the land of historic
    Palestine.
  • Herzl believed Zionism, the reuniting of Jewish
    people in Palestine, would match A people
    without a land with a land without a
    people.Herzl believed Zionism, the reuniting of
    Jewish people in Palestine, would match A people
    without a land with a land without a people.

21
Palestinian Conflict
  • Palestine was already inhabited, however. The
    countryside was home to Arabs, most of them
    Muslims,
  • The vast majority of Palestinians were Muslim
    Arabs, the term Palestinians now usually refers
    only to them
  • In 1922 the British separated Palestine into two
    territories land east of the Jordan River became
    the Emirate of Transjordan which is now Jordan
    land to the west, from Lebanon and Syria in the
    north to Egypt in the south, remained Palestine
  • Both Jews and Arabs conducted terrorist attacks
    and intermittent, low-level warfare. Both groups
    resisted the British, particularly when a British
    policy was believed to benefit one side over the
    other. The struggle was reflected in political
    efforts to control land, institutions, and the
    economy.

22
Palestinian Conflict
  • In the Arab-Israeli War of 1948 Arab forces had
    expected an easy victory over the small and
    isolated Jewish state, but despite heavy
    casualties Israel won
  • Israel also increased the land under its control.
    The region just west of the Jordan River known as
    the West Bank came under the control of
    Transjordan
  • The demoralized Arab world was unwilling to
    accept the Israeli victory, and shortly after the
    war the Arabs began to regroup for more fighting
  • In 1967 several Arab states called for war.
    Assuming the Arabs would attack, Israel struck
    first, and caught the Arabs by surprise
  • In the Six-Day War that followed, Israel
    demolished the armies and air forces of the
    Arabs. It also gained control of the West Bank,
    the Sinai Peninsula and Gaza Strip, the Golan
    Heights region of southwestern Syria, and all of
    Jerusalem

23
Palestinian Conflict
  • The UN Security Council passed Resolution 242,
    which called for an exchange of territory for
    peace and for a resettling of the Palestinian
    refugees
  • Arabs and Israelis both rejected Resolution 242.
    The Arab states continued to call for the
    destruction of Israel, while Israel for its part,
    refused to withdraw from the territories it
    occupied
  • The Arabs attacked in October 1973 on Yom Kippur,
    the holiest day of the Jewish year, and caught
    Israel by surprise. The Arab advances greatly
    restored Arab confidence. Israel, however,
    quickly recovered from the surprise and again
    pushed into Arab territory
  • In the late 1980s Palestinians began a widespread
    campaign against the continuing Israeli
    occupation of the Gaza Strip and West Bank
  • The uprising put the Israeli army on the
    defensive and forced them to devote significant
    resources to patrolling the Occupied Territories
    as a police force. Many soldiers, including
    civilian reservists, were injured or killed, and
    the army in turn often used brutal tactics
    against Palestinians

24
Palestinian Conflict
  • the United States, along with its one-time enemy
    the USSR, pressed Arabs and Israelis to pursue
    peace in the Madrid Conference of 1991
  • In 1993, while the official negotiating teams of
    the Palestinians and Israel were engaged in
    deadlocked negotiations in the United States
  • The Oslo Accords and the resulting Declaration of
    Principles set the stage for a gradual transfer
    of power to the Palestinians
  • Further agreements in 1994 and 1995 gave the
    Palestinians autonomy over most aspects of life
    in the Gaza Strip and in urban areas of the West
    Bank
  • Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was
    assassinated in 1995 by an Israeli student
    opposed to the peace process
  • Under Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu,
    the peace process stalled in 1997
  • Netanyahu completed some elements of the peace
    agreements, such as removing Israeli troops from
    the West Bank town of Hebron, some of his
    policies, including building Israeli settlements
    in Arab East Jerusalem, angered Palestinians

25
Palestinian Conflict
  • In October 1998 Netanyahu and Arafat signed an
    accord by which Israel would withdraw from
    additional West Bank territory in return for
    Palestinian security measures against terrorist
    attacks on Israel
  • In November Israel completed the first of three
    scheduled withdrawals, but froze the
    implementation of the accord the following month.
    Israel claimed that the Palestinians had not
    carried out their part of the accord and placed
    new conditions on further withdrawals. These
    developments again stalled the peace process and
    delayed negotiations on the final status of the
    West Bank and Gaza Strip
  • Today, the United States continue to try and
    negotiate peace in the middle east and with every
    attempt there is met a strong opposition from the
    public of the Arabs and Israelis.
  • Recently attempts by secretary of state Colin
    Powell to engaged in peace accords have yielded
    results but not of the significance that is
    desired.

26
Religious Terrorism
27
Muslim Beliefs
  • Believe in one God Allah.
  • Believe in the Prophets.
  • Their holy book is the Quran.
  • Believe in the day of Judgment.
  • Believe in Angels.

28
Judaism
  • Believe in a single God.
  • Believe that God is continuously at work
    throughout the world.
  • God is above and beyond all earthly things.

29
Jaish-e-Muhammad
  • The group is from Pakistan.
  • Group has preformed many killings and suicide
    bombings.
  • The latest was in Kashmir, India.
  • A suicide bomber drove a car filled with
    explosives into the Kashmir legislative counsil
    building.

30
Irish Republican Army (IRA)
  • They are national terrorists
  • Commit many bombings and suicide car bombings
  • Have performed many bombings in Ireland, UK, and
    Germany.

31
Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO)
  • Have comited patterns of Global terrorism
  • Composed of numerous guerrilla groups
  • Al Fatah, the largest of the groups is lead by
    Yasir Arafat.

32
In Conclusion
  • Religion covers the world, it is hard not to be
    influenced by some type of religious group.
  • The Historically Conflicts dealing with religion
    have been raging for eons.
  • The fact that we consider ourselves more
    educated now does not influence religion.
  • There are many people that have delt with this in
    the past and we will have to continue to struggle
    to reach peace.

33
Conclusion
  • The Future is unknown when dealing with the
    present conflicts
  • The past shows us that this is not a simple whos
    right and whos wrong.
  • The fighting may continue on for many many years
    to come
  • The goals are to try to satisfy many different
    people with many views
  • In the end what will happen in Ultimately
    unknown, but the future as of now holds the hope
    that some day this will be over.

34
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