Country: United Kingdom
City:
Organizer
HeartEdge
Location
Online Event
This is the second of a 4-part series that explores the themes of Migration, Theology and Community. In this interactive session, panelists Pádraig Ó Tuama, Sofia Rehman, Rabbi Robyn Ashworth-Steen, and Lia Shimada (chair) will discuss ways in which sacred religious texts shape, and are shaped by, migration and community.
Mapping Faith: Theologies of Migration and Community (published by Jessica Kingsley, 2020) brings together over 35 writers, poets, artists and practitioners, from primarily Jewish, Muslim and Christian backgrounds. Royalties from book sales will be donated to the Helen Bamber Foundation, with whom HeartEdge has a longstanding relationship.
This event is co-sponsored by the Susanna Wesley Foundation, which facilitated the production of the book.
Bios:
Dr Lia Shimada is a geographer and theologian based at the University of Roehampton, where she serves as Senior Researcher for the Susanna Wesley Foundation and Associate Chaplain of Whitelands College. She is the editor of Mapping Faith: Theologies of Migration and Community (Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 2020).
Pádraig Ó Tuama is a poet and theologian from Ireland. His work has been featured in Poetry Ireland Review, the Harvard Review, RTÉ Poem of the Week, BBC Radio 4, and other media. The author of five books, Pádraig presents ‘Poetry Unbound’ with On Being studios. He is the former leader of Corrymeela, Ireland’s oldest reconciliation centre.
Dr Sofia Rehman is a Leeds-based academic with an interest in the Prophetic tradition in Islam (Hadith) and historical female engagement of the tradition. She is the founder of the Islam and Feminism Critical Reading Group, hosted by the Iqbal Centre at the University of Leeds, where she brings together scholars and local community members to discuss texts pertaining to Islam and gender. With the pandemic, this project now has an online, global reach.
Rabbi Robyn Ashworth-Steen is based at Manchester Reform Synagogue. Formerly a human right lawyer, she is co-founder of Tzelem: The Rabbinic Call for Social and Economic Justice in the UK, and co-chair of Greater Manchester Citizens (a broad-based community organizing chapter).