Belonging

Christian and Muslim Perspectives

Tuesday, June 10-14, 2025
Location: Off Campus - Tübingen, Germany Map

The twenty-third Building Bridges Seminar, chaired by Rev. Daniel A. Madigan, S.J., met June 10–14, 2025 at the Center for Islamic Theology, University of Tübingen, Germany, on the theme of “Belonging: Christian and Muslim Perspectives.” Informing this dialogue among 35 Christian and Muslim scholar-believers and staff was acute awareness that “belonging”—a thread running through consideration of such weighty and urgent matters as displacement, migration, homeland, diaspora, territory, indigeneity, nationalism, and otherness—is a word with both a positive, welcoming valence and a negative, rejecting implication. At every level, from the personal to the national to the global, myriad examples of generous hospitality toward and harsh rejection of the other present themselves—all in the name of who belongs where and what belongs to whom. With these thoughts in mind, the 2025 Building Bridges Seminar engaged in close reading of 63 selections from scripture and other sources—some of which demonstrated negative use of the notion of “belonging"; other, positive use; and some offering a vision of human belonging shaped by the acknowledgement that all ultimately belongs to God.

The public was invited to the seminar’s opening session during which overview lectures were given by Professors Youshaa Patel (Lafayette College, United States) and Catherine Cornille (Boston College, United States). Professor Lejla Demiri, executive director of the Center for Islamic Theology, and Professor Madigan introduced the event. 

Lectures during the seminar’s closed sessions were given by Professors Ahmet Alibasić (University of Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina), Jonathan Chaplin (Wesley House, Cambridge, UK), Safwat Marzouk (Union Presbyterian Seminary, USA), Amina Nawaz (Boğaziçi University, Türkiye), Martin Nguyen (Fairfield University, USA), and Elizabeth Phillips (Woolf Institute, Cambridge, UK).

In due time, a complete volume of the proceedings of Building Bridges 2025 will be published.

The Building Bridges Seminar is planned and convened by Georgetown University, and this year it was co-hosted by the Center for Islamic Theology at the University of Tübingen.

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