Arab Christianity and Interfaith Dialogue in Syria: Father Paolo Dall’Oglio and the Concept of badaliyya

Show notes

Dr. Arpan Roy is a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Postdoctoral Fellow at ZMO whose current research revolves around theologies of “mission” in Arab Christianity. In this episode, Dr. Sonja Hegasy, vice director of ZMO, speaks with him about the Syriac Catholic monastery Deir Mar Musa al-Habashi in Syria and its founder, the Italian priest Paolo Dall’Oglio, who developed a unique practice of Muslim-Christian interfaith dialogue that he called badaliyya. Two years after the beginning of the Syrian War in 2011, Dall’Oglio was kidnapped while attempting to engage in dialogue with the Islamic State (ISIS) militant group and has not been seen since. Dr. Roy discusses the theological relationship between Dall’Oglio’s monastic practice and his engagement with militant Islamist groups, also shares some ethnographic moments and motives that drive his research.

https://www.zmo.de/en/people/arpan-roy https://www.zmo.de/en/research/religion-and-intellectual-culture/arpan-roy-religion-and-intellectual-culture

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