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Born in England in 1944, Karen Armstrong is a TED Prize-winning scholar of comparative religion best known for her bestselling 1993 volume "A History of God." A Catholic nun from[…]

All human societies have some version of the Golden Rule. What does Karen Armstrong’s “Charter for Compassion” hope to accomplish by codifying it?

Question: Can the Golden Rule be separated from faith?

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Karen Armstrong: Look, the Golden Rule lies at the heart of every religious and of every ethical system of morality, it what makes us look at one another.  The religions have all adopted it independently, Chinese, Indian, Muslim, Christian, Jewish, because they find it works and because it says something very deep about the structure of our humanity.  This is the way human beings work, and if we do it consistently, all day and every day, not when we just happen to feel like it, but even when it's utterly inconvenient, or it goes against our self-interest, then if we do that consistently we discover an enhanced capacity of human mind.  The trouble is that most people don't.  And so, one of the reasons why I started my Charter for Compassion, was to bring the Golden Rule back to the center of religion and morality and not put other's secondary goals, less demand goals, into the forefront.

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Question: How do you hope to affect global policy by codifying the Golden Rule?

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Karen Armstrong: Well, look.  This a huge question.  But it seemed to me for a long time that unless we now learn to implement the Golden Rule globally, so that we treat all peoples, all nations, whoever they are and however distant they may seem to us in terms of either distance or ideology, as we wish to be treated ourselves, we are not going to have a viable world to hand on to the next generation. 

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We are now linked together as never before, electronically, financially, economically, politically.  What happens in Afghanistan or Gaza today can now have repercussions in New York or London tomorrow.  It's no longer "trouble spots are over there"; we're all bound together and yet our world is deeply polarized.  And a huge imbalance of wealth, and this is both a religious and a moral problem that should concern us all. 

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There's a huge imbalance in power and that has resulted in the alienation, rage, fury, and awful amoral terrorism that has erupted and is erupting at the present time.  And in order to counter this, we need to make the compassionate voice of religion and morality a dynamic force in our world.  And often it has been frustrating to me as a historian for religion that the religions which should be making, because of their ethos of the Golden Rule, a major contribution to this very crucial endeavor of our time, main task of our time are often seen as part of the problem and often when religious people get together all they talk about is doctrines or – I want to change that.  And the more aggressive our ideologies become, the more aggressive our discourse whether it's in the United States, from Washington D.C., or whether it's from Tehran, or from some underground Al-Qaeda cell.  The more aggressive that discourse is, the more people of moderate persuasion have to organize and speak a voice of compassion.  That means to feel with the other. 

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And that doesn't just mean that we all fall into each other's arms.  This requires dedicated practice.  In order to always treat others, as we would wish to be treated ourselves, we have to learn about each other.  Not just relying on an op-ed piece we may have read here, or a half-remembered interview on the television program there that happens to chime with our own views.  We have to make a disciplined effort to find out what our governments are doing in these various parts of the world and what is actually happening.  We have to learn to listen to each other's stories.  Something we are not very good at.  We are opinionated society.  We're very happy to spout forth our own views; we're not good about listening.  We have to listen to other's stories.  Learn to listen to the stories of the terrorists just as we hope that they will listen to ours because very often these narratives express frustrations, fears, and anxieties that most societies can safely ignore. 

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St. Augustine, founder of the western Christian tradition, said that if a biblical text seems to teach hate and violence, you have to give it an allegorical interpretation and make it speak charity even if this distorts the meaning of the original biblical author, and the rabbis in the Talmudic age do the same.  Somehow this has to be orchestrated and now we've got onboard in the charter, at this moment about 140 partners, worldwide, and they have their own website, and these people have all been working on this, but independently, in isolation.  Now we can all work together and create a global grassroots network.  Thousands of people are signing onto the charter online, and that means an act of commitment.  We'll keep them informed.  We want to create, never mind the leaders or the bishops or chief rabbis or imams, or Popes.  We want to create a grassroots movement where people will become attuned to uncompassionate discourse in the same way as we are now attuned to sort of gender imbalance in our speech. 

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I was reading in a book the other day where people spoke about man and mankind.  Now, that's offensive.  Now, we're attuned to that.  I want to give people an ear to that.  I want to create a rapid response team, right around the world, perhaps starting originally with our partners, similar to the one we have in the United Nations whereby, where there's a problem in our society which demands a compassionate response, an educated, informed, not just a splurgy emotional thing, but an informed compassionate response that puts yourself in the position of the other and sees all sides of the problem, not just your own, there'll be somebody poised in each society who can write to the media, write an op-ed piece, to go on TV or radio.

Recorded on November 16, 2009
Interviewed by Austin Allen


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