A new way to foster religious tolerance Put everyone under one roof
On the site of a former 13th-century church in Berlin, the worldâs first planned structure to house a synagogue, a church, and a mosque under one roof is being built: the House of One.
Borne of the efforts of an imam, a rabbi, and a Protestant minister, the House of One broke ground in May. The design will consist of three distinct boxy wings that join into one large structure. Each faith will have its own space, arranged around a central public area.
Why We Wrote ThisReligion can sometimes throw up walls between different believers. The House of One in Berlin is specifically being built to combat that.
With money from private parties as well as the city and federal governments, the House of One is intended to cultivate diversity and tolerance of other religions during a time of global chaos and strife. Itâs four years away from completion, but supporters say the House of One is already gathering communities â" and fostering dialogue.
âItâs urgently necessary to enlighten the religious-exclusives, those people who believe their way to God is the only right way,â says Mouhanad Khorchide, a member of the House of One Board of Trustees. âThis project forces them to question those thoughts, and to think about diversity within religion.â
Berlin
Betül Samhal is a practicing Muslim in âChristian country,â as she puts it. Sheâs found her tightknit Muslim community in Berlin where she lives, but says sheâs never intimately known many Christians or Jews. Nor has she ever had the chance to talk with them about religion.
âPeople typically avoid people of other faiths,â says Ms. Samhal, an elementary school teacher. âPeople either canât or donât want to understand each other.â
Enter Berlinâs House of One, the worldâs first planned structure that will house a synagogue, a church, and a mosque under one roof.
Why We Wrote ThisReligion can sometimes throw up walls between different believers. The House of One in Berlin is specifically being built to combat that.
Itâs four years away from completion, but the community has already provided Ms. Samhal with a formal structure in which to mingle with Christians and Jews. Sheâs also been able to present to people of all faiths about Islam, and vice versa. Recently, she had an audience of 70. There isnât âjust one Islam,â Ms. Samhal told the group, and she also addressed a misconception about women by explaining that each branch of Islam sees women very differently.
âThen we went to a mosque, and the second day we went to a church, and the third day to a synagogue,â says Ms. Samhal. âThree religions under one roof allows space for dialogue â" our discussions dismantle stereotypes we may have had about other religions.â
Borne of the efforts of an imam, a rabbi, and a Protestant minister, the House of One broke ground in May after a decade of negotiations and fundraising. With money from private parties as well as the city and federal governments, the House of One is intended to cultivate diversity and tolerance of other religions during a time of global chaos and strife. Supporters say the House of One is already gathering communities â" and fostering dialogue.
âItâs urgently necessary to enlighten the religious-exclusives, those people who believe their way to God is the only right way. This project forces them to question those thoughts, and to think about diversity within religion,â says Mouhanad Khorchide, director of the Center for Islamic Theology at the University of Münster and a member of the House of One Board of Trustees. âI canât tell you if the House of One is going to be a success yet or not. But the symbolism of the project is that it shows these three religions can get along, not that everyone does get along.â
Taking responsibility togetherThe first stone was laid in May in Petriplatz, on the foundation of a former 13th-century church to St. Peter. It was essentially the birthplace of Berlin.
The design for the House of One was put out to competition, won by a Berlin-based architecture firm, and will consist of three distinct boxy wings that join into one large structure. Each faith will have its own space, arranged around a central hall where people can encounter each other in a public area.
Rendering Kuehn Malvezzi/Petriplatz © Davide Abbonacci/House of One
The House of One, shown here in an artist's rendering, will hold three different houses of worship in separate wings, all meeting in a central public hall to foster community and discussion among members of different faiths.
The support of the political class is clear â" the Bundestag (a federal legislative body) contributed â¬10 million ($11.8 million) and the city of Berlin â¬10 million, with the roughly â¬20 million remaining coming from private donations from people in more than 60 countries. And the goals of the founders are as lofty as the design.
âThe House of One wants to contribute to world peace,â says Imam Kadir Sancı, âand itâs important that Jews, Christians, and Muslims take responsibility together and work on an equal footing. Because they have often shown in history how to rival.â
In other words, the social divisions sown by diversity must be healed, and no one can solve these rifts alone. For House of One co-âinitiatorsâ Mr. Sancı, Rabbi Tovia Ben-Chorin, and the Rev. Gregor Höhberg, religion is an ideal place to bring people together. After all, 85% of people in the world belong to a religion.
Along those lines, the House of One will be a place of learning and education, since teaching about religions can promote respect and cross-cultural understanding. It can also dispel stereotypes, says Mr. Höhberg. Religion offers a wealth of experience to show people of âdifferent religions, cultures, and origins how to co-exist peacefully,â he adds.
Encouraging religious integrationCritics of the project are plentiful. Who will actually worship there, when distinct places of faith â" synagogues, churches, mosques â" have long been embedded within Berlin neighborhoods, with deep connections to their residents?
Further, a common criticism of interreligious dialogue is that it can make members feel out of touch with their own religion. Some Muslims have criticized the project because of the involvement of Forum Dialog e.V., a Muslim organization connected with the Gülen movement, which has been banned in Turkey, says Dr. Khorchide.
Still, the optimism around the House of One is strong. And the criticism that interfaith dialogue waters down oneâs own religious passion? âYears of experience show that dialogue awakens in people the need to get to know their own religion better and more intensively,â explains Mr. Sancı.
Dr. Khorchide nods to the tremendous potential for the project to change the dialogue on a civil, theological, and political level. âWhen we laid the first stone, the former president of Germany was there,â he says. âThe state is funding more than half of this project. Politicians in Germany are very invested in encouraging religionsâ integration â" itâs a clear signal.â
One signal the House of One does send is that Islamophobia and antisemitism will not be tolerated.
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Whether such goals come to pass, Ms. Samhal says sheâs already befriended Jews that she now sees socially.
âAs a Muslim you donât often get a chance to speak with Jewish people,â she says, âand I was so excited to be able to make friends and get their perspective on things.â
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