America is the most religiously devout country in the Western world and the most religiously diverse nation on the planet. In today鈥檚 volatile climate of religious conflict, prejudice, and distrust, how do we affirm the principle that the American promise is deeply intertwined with how each of us engages with people of different faiths and beliefs? Eboo Patel, former faith adviser to Barack Obama and named one of America鈥檚 best leaders by U.S. News & World Report, provides answers to this timely and consequential question.
In this inspiring and thought-provoking book, Patel draws on his personal experience as a Muslim in America to examine broader questions about the importance of religious diversity in the cultural, political, and economic life of the nation. He explores how religious language has given the United States some of its most enduring symbols and inspired many of its most vital civic institutions鈥攁nd demonstrates how the genius of the American experiment lies in its empowerment of people of all creeds, ethnicities, and convictions.
Will America鈥檚 identity as a Judeo-Christian nation shift as citizens of different backgrounds grow in numbers and influence? In what ways will minority religious communities themselves change as they take root in American soil? In addressing these and other questions, Patel shows how America鈥檚 promise is the guarantee of equal rights and dignity for all, and how that promise is the foundation of America鈥檚 unrivaled strength as a nation. The book also includes incisive commentaries by John Inazu, Robert Jones, and Laurie Patton on American civil religion, faith and law, and the increasing number of nonreligious Americans.
"Building on his prowess as an interfaith pioneer in American colleges, Patel offers a vision of pluralism that aims to guard against religious preference and particularism, advances everyday ethics, and invites Americans of many religious persuasions into civic participation. . . . Readers will be rewarded with Patel鈥檚 rich perspective on religious diversity in America as he champions the strength of its civic identity and the possibility of religious pluralism in the years to come."鈥Publishers Weekly, starred review
"Patel provides a thoughtful and passionate response to contemporary social and civic ills grounded in his experience as a Muslim American. . . . For a compelling portrait of pluralistic optimism in the early decades of the twenty-first century, sociologists of religion in America could ask for no better primary source."鈥擡lizabeth Dolfi, Sociology of Religion
"Patel portrays civil religion as a potluck supper where the food on the table diversifies and palate widens as demographics change but lately from the countryside to the inner city, the unchanging inventory of food items placed on top of grocery store shelves and behind a fast food restaurant counters feeds Americans."鈥擲her Afgan Tareen, Politics, Religion, & Ideology
鈥淥ne of America鈥檚 deepest thinkers on religion and the human condition.鈥濃U.S. News & World Report
鈥淓boo Patel is a true hero of the interfaith movement of America and, at a critical time in our national history, he continues his active work building bridges between cultures and religions. Read him and applaud his efforts.鈥濃擜mbassador Akbar Ahmed, American University, Washington, DC
鈥淓boo Patel is a national treasure. Curious, open, and hopeful, he is a careful observer of his own experience, a diligent student of the American project, and an intellectual committed to getting his hands dirty. Patel is the best of what this country makes: a person of faith with a heart as big as his mind.鈥濃擜yad Akhtar, Pulitzer Prize鈥搘inning author of Disgraced
鈥Out of Many Faiths is timely, well鈥恈rafted, concise, and beautifully written. It is a powerful book that I hope is read widely and sparks many conversations, both public and private, about the state of religious diversity in the contemporary United States.鈥濃擠avid E. Campbell, coauthor of Seeking the Promised Land: Mormons and American Politics
鈥淚n this brilliant book, an ardent Muslim American documents our long American commitment to religious pluralism鈥攆rom Jefferson, Franklin, and Washington to Barack Obama鈥攁nd asks what it will take for this bold experiment to thrive as we become more diverse than ever. Essential reading for today鈥檚 citizens.鈥濃擠iana Eck, professor of religion, Harvard University, and director of the Pluralism Project
鈥淚n times like these, when ignorance seems to be banishing our nature鈥檚 better angels from an increasingly rancorous public square, it is easy to despair. Patel sees the nativism, racism, and religious bigotry now trampling across American society, but he refuses to take his eye off the promises American citizens have made to themselves. He makes a gloriously unapologetic case for such old-fashioned American values as empathetic citizenship and religious pluralism.鈥濃擲tephen Prothero, author of God Is Not One: The Eight Rival Religions That Run the World
鈥淓boo Patel is a visionary figure in America鈥檚 struggle with pluralism, religious and otherwise, and has been a tireless force for meaningful change on college campuses. With this book, we experience the sweep of his intellect and perspective. This is a field guide to the critical territory we have traversed in this eventful, young century, and to the path that lies before us if we are to rise to our promise as a nation.鈥濃擪rista Tippett, founder and CEO of the On Being Project
鈥Out of Many Faiths is a passionate response to the anti-Muslim, anti-immigrant, racist white nationalism that so deeply afflicts our nation. Eboo Patel draws from American history and personal experience to argue that we can rise above these hurtful dysfunctions鈥攊ndeed, that we must if we are to be the successful experiment in democracy that our founders envisioned.鈥濃擱obert Wuthnow, author of The Left Behind: Decline and Rage in Rural America