Muslim World Initiative
Building trust and dialogue between political, social and religious leaders

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Brumberg's Blog appears on On Faith
Read Daniel Brumberg's posts on The Washington Post/Georgetown University blog, "On Faith." The blog is "designed to provide knowledge, inform debate, and promote greater dialogue and understanding across religious traditions." Brumberg is a regular contributor.
This initiative is designed to help to mobilize moderates, marginalize militants, and bridge the U.S./Muslim-world divide.
The diverse peoples, cultures and societies that constitute the Muslim world are animated by a common ethical and religious heritage that resonates across the globe. From Jakarta to Cairo, from Dakar to Paris, Muslims sense that they form one grand community, or umma. Yet this feeling coexists with social, political, cultural and religious forces that are pulling Muslim regions and states in different directions. Indeed, at no time in recent history has the Muslim world experienced such a degree of ideological, political and sectarian fragmentation. Rising tensions between Sunnis and Shi'ites, between non-Islamists and secularists, or between all these groups and their ethnic counterparts, threaten to undermine national and regional security. With three potential civil wars on its doorstep—in Lebanon, Iraq and Palestine—the quest for a shared agenda of political and social change is giving way to a new kind of globalized sectarianism.
In this challenging context, the United States Institute of Peace, and in particular its Muslim World Initiative (MWI), has a special role to play. USIP works to build trust and dialogue between political, social and religious leaders in the United States and their counterparts in the Muslim world. Moreover, USIP assists religious, political and social activists in the Muslim world in their efforts to overcome a range of domestic and regional disputes. While it is ultimately up to Muslims themselves to forge such common ground, USIP offers a helping hand by sharing its expertise in the fields of conflict resolution, religion and peacemaking, and political reform.

