time magazine - abraham

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Sunday, Sep. 22, 2002 The Legacy of Abraham He is beloved by Jews, Christians and Muslims. Can this bond stop them from hating one another? By DAVID VAN BIEMA My first real experience of the patriarch Abraham's crossover appeal came on the splendid sun-spangled day in June when I took a cross-town cab to arrange my son's circumcision. Jews have circumcised for thousands of years—ever since God (as the Torah tells it), having made a history-altering pact with Abraham, directed him to "cut my Covenant in your flesh." Some  biblical commentators suggest that the circumcision was meant as much as a reminder to the Lord as to the Israelites, a kind of divine Post-it not to extirpate these people. My thought as we rolled eastward across Manhattan was, there must be easier ways. We slowed behind traffic on one of the roads through Central Park, and I found myself tapping my foot. The tune on the cab's stereo was Arabic but with a catchy, bubbling horn section. I asked who was playing. A Moroccan group, said the cabbie. He told me its name. Did I want to know what it was singing? Certainly. It was a plea to Israel from the Arab people. The chorus was, "We have the same father. Why do you treat us this way?" Who might the father be? I asked. "Ibrahim," he said. "The song is called Ismail and Isaac," after his sons. We have the same father. Why do you treat us this way? What did that scrap of a song hint at? First of all, it gave witness that a figure beloved by Jews and Christians has a Muslim constituency, suggesting a connection between Islam and the West that might surprise most Americans in this tense season. But second, it acknowledged that despite this apparent bond, there is still turmoil among the sons of Abraham. It wouldn't do to call Abraham a neglected giant of the Bible; almost everyone knows the outline of his story. But until recently he probably has not received the credit he deserves as a religious innovator. As biblical pioneer of the idea that there is only one God, he is on a par with Moses, St. Paul and Muhammad, responsible for what Thomas Cahill, author of the 1998 history The Gifts of the Jews, calls "a complete departure from everything that has gone before in the evolution of culture and sensibility." In other words, Abraham changed the world. Even less well known to most Americans is the breadth of his following. Jews, who consider him their own, are largely unaware of Abraham's presence in Christianity, which accepts his Torah story as part of the Old Testament and honors him in contexts ranging from the Roman Catholic Mass ("Look with favor on these offerings and accept them as once you accepted ... the sacrifice of Abraham") to a Protestant children's song ("Father Abraham had many sons/ And I am one of them and so are you ... "). And neither Jews nor Christians know very much about Abraham's role in Islam, which acknowledges the Torah narrative but with significant changes and additions. The Koran portrays Abraham as the first man to make full surrender to Allah. Each of the five repetitions of daily prayer ends with a reference to him. The holy book recounts Abraham's building of the Ka'aba, the  black cube that is Mecca's central shrine. Several of the rituals performed in that city by pilgrims making the hajj recall episodes from his history. Those who cannot journey still join in celebrating the Festival of Sacrifice, in which a lamb or goat is offered up to commemorate the same near sacrifice of a son that the Jews feature at their New Year. It is the holiest single day on the Islamic calendar. In fact, excluding God, Abraham is the only biblical figure who enjoys the unanimous acclaim of all three faiths, the only one (as the song in the cab suggested) referred to by all three as Father. In theory, this remarkable consensus should make him an interfaith superstar, a special resource in these times of anger and mistrust. And since last September, interfaith activists have  been scheduling Abraham lectures, Abraham speeches and even "Abraham salons" around the country and overseas. A new  book called Abraham: A Journey to the Heart of Three Faiths (William Morrow) by Bruce Feiler, author of the best-selling scriptural travelogue Walking the Bible, espouses their cause. Yet they have an uphill battle. For all the commonality Abraham represents, the answer to the song's plaintive query—Why do you treat us this way?—is written in anathemas and blood over the centuries. If Abraham is indeed father of three faiths, then he is like a father who left a bitterly disputed will. Judaism and Islam, for starters, cannot even agree on which son he almost sacrificed. Then there is Abraham's Covenant with God. Many Jews (and some conservative Christians) believe it granted the Jewish people alone the right to the Holy Land. That belief fuels much of the Israeli settler movement and plays an ever greater role in Israel's hostility toward Palestinian nationalist claims. "Our connection to the land goes back to our first ancestor. Arabs have no right to the land of Israel," says Rabbi Haim Druckman, a settler leader and a parliamentarian with the National Religious Party. This argument infuriates

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Page 1: Time Magazine - Abraham

8/7/2019 Time Magazine - Abraham

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/time-magazine-abraham 1/5

Sunday, Sep. 22, 2002

The Legacy of Abraham

He is beloved by Jews, Christians and Muslims. Can this bond stop them from hating oneanother?By DAVID VAN BIEMA My first real experience of the patriarch Abraham's crossover appeal came on the splendid sun-spangled day in June when

took a cross-town cab to arrange my son's circumcision. Jews have circumcised for thousands of years—ever since God (the Torah tells it), having made a history-altering pact with Abraham, directed him to "cut my Covenant in your flesh." Som biblical commentators suggest that the circumcision was meant as much as a reminder to the Lord as to the Israelites, a kind

divine Post-it not to extirpate these people. My thought as we rolled eastward across Manhattan was, there must be easi

ways.

We slowed behind traffic on one of the roads through Central Park, and I found myself tapping my foot. The tune on the cab

stereo was Arabic but with a catchy, bubbling horn section. I asked who was playing. A Moroccan group, said the cabbie. H

told me its name. Did I want to know what it was singing? Certainly. It was a plea to Israel from the Arab people. The chor

was, "We have the same father. Why do you treat us this way?" Who might the father be? I asked. "Ibrahim," he said. "T

song is called Ismail and Isaac," after his sons.

We have the same father. Why do you treat us this way? What did that scrap of a song hint at? First of all, it gave witness th

a figure beloved by Jews and Christians has a Muslim constituency, suggesting a connection between Islam and the West th

might surprise most Americans in this tense season. But second, it acknowledged that despite this apparent bond, there is stturmoil among the sons of Abraham.

It wouldn't do to call Abraham a neglected giant of the Bible; almost everyone knows the outline of his story. But un

recently he probably has not received the credit he deserves as a religious innovator. As biblical pioneer of the idea that the

is only one God, he is on a par with Moses, St. Paul and Muhammad, responsible for what Thomas Cahill, author of the 19

history The Gifts of the Jews, calls "a complete departure from everything that has gone before in the evolution of culture a

sensibility." In other words, Abraham changed the world.

Even less well known to most Americans is the breadth of his following. Jews, who consider him their own, are largeunaware of Abraham's presence in Christianity, which accepts his Torah story as part of the Old Testament and honors him

contexts ranging from the Roman Catholic Mass ("Look with favor on these offerings and accept them as once yo

accepted ... the sacrifice of Abraham") to a Protestant children's song ("Father Abraham had many sons/ And I am one of the

and so are you ... ").

And neither Jews nor Christians know very much about Abraham's role in Islam, which acknowledges the Torah narrative bwith significant changes and additions. The Koran portrays Abraham as the first man to make full surrender to Allah. Each

the five repetitions of daily prayer ends with a reference to him. The holy book recounts Abraham's building of the Ka'aba, t

 black cube that is Mecca's central shrine. Several of the rituals performed in that city by pilgrims making the hajj reca

episodes from his history. Those who cannot journey still join in celebrating the Festival of Sacrifice, in which a lamb or go

is offered up to commemorate the same near sacrifice of a son that the Jews feature at their New Year. It is the holiest sing

day on the Islamic calendar.

In fact, excluding God, Abraham is the only biblical figure who enjoys the unanimous acclaim of all three faiths, the only o

(as the song in the cab suggested) referred to by all three as Father. In theory, this remarkable consensus should make him a

interfaith superstar, a special resource in these times of anger and mistrust. And since last September, interfaith activists ha

 been scheduling Abraham lectures, Abraham speeches and even "Abraham salons" around the country and overseas. A ne

 book called Abraham: A Journey to the Heart of Three Faiths (William Morrow) by Bruce Feiler, author of the best-sellin

scriptural travelogue Walking the Bible, espouses their cause.Yet they have an uphill battle. For all the commonality Abraham represents, the answer to the song's plaintive query—Why you treat us this way?—is written in anathemas and blood over the centuries. If Abraham is indeed father of three faiths, th

he is like a father who left a bitterly disputed will.

Judaism and Islam, for starters, cannot even agree on which son he almost sacrificed. Then there is Abraham's Covenant w

God. Many Jews (and some conservative Christians) believe it granted the Jewish people alone the right to the Holy Lan

That belief fuels much of the Israeli settler movement and plays an ever greater role in Israel's hostility toward Palestinia

nationalist claims. "Our connection to the land goes back to our first ancestor. Arabs have no right to the land of Israel," sa

Rabbi Haim Druckman, a settler leader and a parliamentarian with the National Religious Party. This argument infuriat

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Palestinian Muslims—especially since the Koran claims that Abraham was not a Jew but Islam's first believer. "The peop

who supported Abraham believed in one God and only one God, and that was the Muslims. Only the Muslims," says She

Taysir Tamimi, Yasser Arafat's liaison for religious dialogue. Not exempt from the tripartite rancor, early Christians used their understanding of Abraham, who they claimed found gra

outside Jewish law, to prove that the older religion begged for replacement—a contention that helped propel almost tw

millenniums of anti-Semitism.

Abraham is thus a much more difficult—and more interesting—figure than at first he seems. His history constitutes a kind

multifaith scandal, a case study for monotheism's darker side, the desire of people to define themselves by excluding demonizing others. The fate of interfaith stalwarts seeking to undo that heritage and locate in the patriarch a true symbol

accord should be meaningful to all of us suddenly interested in the apparent chasm between Islam and the West. Sa

Abraham author Feiler: "I believe he's a flawed vessel for reconciliation, but he's the best figure we've got."

Feiler began Abraham after the Sept. 11 attacks, seeking a unifying symbol in a time of strife. Instead, the book records h

growth from a dewy-eyed Abrahamic novice to a more realistic observer. As he remarks, "When I set out on this journey

 believed ... the Great Abrahamic Hope was an oasis in the deepest deserts of antiquity, and all we had to do was track hi

down and his descendants would live in perpetual harmony, dancing Kumbaya around the campfire. That oasis, I realized,

  just a mirage." The sober understanding Feiler ends up with, however, is a more realistic basis from which to se

reconciliation.ABRAHAM THE JEW

Abraham was born, according to tradition, into a family that sold idols—a way of emphasizing the polytheism that reigned

the Middle East before his enlightenment. The stirring first words of the 12th chapter in the Torah's Book of Genesis are Goto him and are often referred to as the Call: "Go forth from your native land/ And from your father's house/ And I will make

you a great nation/ And I will bless those who bless you/ And curse him that curses you/ And all the families of the earth sh

 bless themselves by you." Abraham would appear ill suited to the job. To make a nation, one must have an heir, and he is

childless 75-year-old whose wife Sarah is past menopause. Yet he complies, and he and Sarah set off for a desert hinterland

Canaan—and a new spiritual epoch.

As they travel, God elaborates on his offer. Abraham's children will be as numerous as grains of dust on the earth and stars

the sky. They will spend 400 years as slaves but ultimately possess the land from the Nile to the Euphrates. The pact is seal

in a mysterious ceremony in a dream, during which the Lord, appearing as a smoking torch, puts himself formally under oat

He requires a different acknowledgment from Abraham: he must inscribe a sign of the Covenant on his body, initiating t

Jewish and Muslim customs of circumcision. He is now committed, God notes later, to "keep the way of the Lord to d

righteousness and justice."

Abraham's life becomes very eventful. He travels to Egypt and back and alights in Canaanite towns that may correspond  present-day Nablus, Hebron and Jerusalem. He grows rich, distinguishing himself sometimes as a warrior king and sometim

as an arch-diplomat. At one point, three strangers appear at his tent. A model of Middle Eastern hospitality, he lays out a fea

They turn out to be divine messengers bearing word that God intends to destroy Sodom, where his nephew Lot lives. Abrahainitiates an extraordinary haggling session, persuading the Lord to spare Sodom if 10 righteous people can be found. Th

can't.

Meanwhile, the Torah portrays Abraham's domestic life as a soap opera. Convinced she will have no children, Sarah offe

him her young Egyptian slave Hagar to produce an heir. It works. The 86-year-old fathers a boy, Ishmael. Yet God insists th

Sarah will conceive, and in a wonder confirming Abraham's faith, she bears his second son, Isaac. Jealous of Hagar's an

Ishmael's competing claims on her husband and his legacy, Sarah persuades Abraham to send them out into the desert. Go

saves the duo and promises Hagar that Ishmael will sire a great nation through 12 sons (assumed by tradition to be 12 Ar

tribes). But he stipulates that the Covenant will flow only through Isaac's line.

Then, in one last spectacular test of his faith, God directs Abraham to offer up "your son, your only one, whom you love, yo

Isaac" as a human sacrifice. With an obedience that has troubled modern thinkers from Kierkegaard ("Though Abraha

arouses my admiration, he at the same time appalls me") to Bob Dylan ("Abe says, 'Where do you want this killin' done?' G

says, 'Out on Highway 61'")—but which seems transcendentally right to traditionalists—the father commences to comply on

mountain called Moriah. Only at the last instant does God stay the father's hand and renew his pledge regarding Abraham

descendants.

At age 175, Abraham dies and is laid out next to Sarah, who preceded him, in a plot he has bought in a town later call

Hebron. Both sons attend his funeral.

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That is the story. What is its importance? Despite every effort and argument, there is no way to know what century Abraha

lived in, or even whether he actually existed as a person. (If he did live, it would have been between 2100 B.C. and 1500 B.C

hundreds of years before the date most historians assign to the actual birth of the religion called Judaism.) But Abraharepresents a revolution in thought. While he is not a pure monotheist (he never suggests that other gods do not exist), he is t

Ur-monotheist, the first man in the Bible to abandon all he knows in order to choose the Lord and consciously move ev

deeper into that choice, until the point of no return on Moriah.

The implications of his breakthrough are almost infinite. To have "one God that counts" instead of a constellation of gods w

require occasional ritual appeasement, as Cahill notes in The Gifts of the Jews, means that Abraham's relationship to Go"became the matrix of his life," as it would be for millions who followed. A universal God made it easier to imagine

universal code of ethics. Positing a deity intimately involved in the fate of one's children overturned the prevalent image

time as an ever cycling wheel, effectively inventing the idea of a future. Says Eugene Fisher, director of Catholic-Jewi

relations for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops: "Whether you call it submission in Muslim terms, conversion

Christian terms or t'shuva (turning toward God) for the Jews, monotheism is a radically new understanding, the underlyi

concept of Western civilization." So linked is Abraham's name with this new path that each of the subsequent tw

monotheistic religions reached back hungrily to enfold him—and belittle the others' claims on him.

ABRAHAM THE CHRISTIAN

The church of the holy sepulcher in Jerusalem is arguably the most Christian place on earth, and the gray rock mass Golgotha (or Calvary) inside, the most Christian place in the church. Traditions dating back to the 300s A.D. record that Jes

was crucified here. Just above the rock's Plexiglas-protected expanse is a chapel shared by the Greek Orthodox and Rom

Catholic churches. The Catholic side boasts three mosaics. In the center is Mary Magdalene; to the left is Christ, removfrom the Cross; and to the right is none other than ... Abraham, about to slay Isaac. Notes Feiler: "The image of Jesu

sprawled on the unction stone is nearly identical to the image of Isaac on the altar." The New Testament book Roma

 proposes Isaac's binding and release as a prophetic foreshadowing of the Resurrection.

The man credited with that insight is the Apostle Paul. Jesus mentions Abraham in the Gospels, but it was Paul who did th

fine mortise work, citing the patriarch in his New Testament epistles more than any other figure except Christ. Perhaps th

most strongly self-identifying Jew among the Apostles, Paul clearly felt an urgency to connect his new movement with th

Jewish paterfamilias. He did so primarily through Abraham's original response to God's Call and through the old man

embattled faith, or "hope against hope," as Paul famously put it, that God would bring him a son. Such faith, Paul wrote, ma

Abraham "the father of all who believe."

Yet Paul's Abrahamic bouquet to his birth religion contained poisoned thorns. One of his themes was that a believer no long

needed to be Jewish or to follow Jewish law to be redeemed—the way now lay through Christ. Abraham's story served the

arguments well. His Covenant long predated the Jewish law as brought down from the mountain by Moses, and so, wroPaul, "the promise to Abraham and his descendants ... did not come through law."

 Nor, Paul argued, did it come through tribal inheritance. The God of the Hebrew Bible deemed Abraham to be "righteou

years before his circumcision, he wrote, which meant that his listeners didn't need to become circumcised Jews to bAbraham's inheritors. Baptism in faith would more than suffice. Paul waffled as to whether Christianity rendered Judaism

Abrahamic Covenant null and void. But his successors assumed so. The 2nd century church father Justin Martyr wrote that f

from an indication of grace, circumcision marked Jews "so that your land might become desolate, and your cities burned

something of a self-fulfilling prophecy. Bereft of a divine warrant for their well-being, Jews were at the mercy of the

neighbors' worst instincts. In a remarkably frank assessment, the Greek Orthodox bishop of Jerusalem tells Feiler, "What t

church did with Abraham was bitter and cruel."

ABRAHAM THE MUSLIM

 No faith is as self-consciously monotheistic as Islam, and its embrace of Abraham is correspondingly joyful. If many Jew

know him best as a dynastic grandfather whose grandson Jacob actually founds the nation of Israel, Muslims regard him

one of the four most important prophets. So pure is his submission to the One God that Muhammad later says his ow

message is but a restoration of Abrahamic faith. The Koran includes scenes from Abraham's childhood in which he chides h

father for believing in idols and survives, Daniel-like, in a fiery furnace to which he is condemned for his fealty to Allah. A

in the Koranic version of Abraham's ultimate test, Abraham tells his son of God's command, and the boy replies, "O m

father! Do that which thou art commanded. Allah willing, thou shalt find me of the steadfast." Notes the Koran approvingl

"They had both surrendered," using the verb whose noun form is the word Islam. For passing such trials, Allah tells Abraha

"Lo, I have appointed thee a leader for mankind!"

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But not as a Jew. Somewhat like Paul, Islam concluded that God chooses his people on grounds of commitment rather th

lineage, meaning that Abraham's only true followers are true believers—i.e., Muslims. Moreover, if Allah ever had a pact wi

the Jews as a race, they backslid out of it in episodes such as the worship of the golden calf in the Torah's book of ExoduIndeed, the Koran advises Muslims proselytized by either Jews or Christians to answer, "Nay ... (we follow) the religion

Abraham."

Then there is the matter of Isaac and Ishmael. Unlike the Torah, the Koran does not specify which son God tells Abraham

sacrifice. Muslim interpreters a generation after Muhammad concluded that the prophet was descended from the slave wom

Hagar's boy, Ishmael. Later scholarly opinion determined that Ishmael was also the son who went under the knife. Thdecision effectively completed the Jewish disenfranchisement. Not only was their genealogical claim void, but their forefath

lost his role in the great drama of surrender.

THE CONTESTED PATRIMONY

Things devolved from there. Jews, stung, took steps to cement Abraham's Jewish identity. The Talmud describes hi

anachronistically as following Mosaic law and speaking Hebrew. And they severely downgraded Ishmael. Initially, says Sha

Magid, professor of Midrash at New York City's Jewish Theological Seminary, Jewish parents named their boys aft

Abraham's Arab son, but the custom evaporated as they began living under Muslim rule. By the 11th century the great biblic

scholar Rashi, citing earlier authorities, described Ishmael as a "thief" whom "everybody hates," an insult that can still b

found in his prominently placed commentary in many Torah editions today and that is taught in many Orthodox religiouschools. Ibn Kathir, a 13th century Koranic commentator, struck back by claiming the Jews had "dishonestly a

slanderously" introduced Isaac into the Torah story: "They forced this understanding because Isaac is their father, wh

Ishmael is the father of the Arabs." That sentiment too survives today on the Muslim side.It is enough to make a grown man cry, which Feiler nearly does. "They took a biblical figure open to all," he writes, "toss

out what they wanted to ignore, ginned up what they wanted to stress and ended up with a symbol of their own uniquene

that looked far more like a mirror image of their fantasies than a reflection of the original story." To his horror, he realized th

Abraham "is as much a model for fanaticism as he is for moderation."

The Tomb of the Patriarchs, a massive stone structure built by King Herod 2,000 years ago, is the grim living metaphor f

dueling Abrahamisms. Despite God's promise that this land would be his people's one day, Abraham in Genesis makes a po

of paying Ephron the Hittite 400 silver shekels for a cave in Hebron to serve as a burial plot. He and Sarah were laid ther

and later, Scripture adds, so were Isaac and his wife Rebecca, his grandson Jacob and his first wife Leah. Herod erected

grandiose monument at what he thought was the site. For most of the past few hundred years, its Muslim owners, who calle

it the Mosque of Abraham, allowed Jews to pray near the entrance. When the Israelis took control in 1967, believers of bo

faiths worshipped side by side. Then in 1994 a radical Israeli settler, Dr. Baruch Goldstein, mowed down 29 Muslims

 prayer in the tomb. Custody shifted to a complex scheme granting each side access to parts or all of the tomb on different da but avoiding their meeting. Since the latest intifadeh, the arrangement continues, but the site, hedged about with checkpoin

and razor wire in a neighborhood under strict military curfew, presents a message of piety inextricable from violence a

mistrust.There is an eerie effortlessness to the way in which fights picked by scriptural revisionists hundreds of years ago feed today

 psychology of mutual victimhood. The Jewish Theological Seminary's Magid describes a 1st century tradition in whi

Ishmael is a bully and Isaac "becomes the persecuted younger brother." That belief has persisted. "The Muslims are ve

aggressive, like Ishmael," an Israeli settler tells Feiler. "And the Jews are very passive, like Isaac, who nearly allows himse

to be killed without talking back. That's why they are killing us, because we don't fight back." Arafat's religious liaison She

Tamimi snaps that any Jewish claims based in Genesis are "pure lies, aimed at achieving political gains, at imposing th

sovereignty of Israeli occupation on the holy places."

HOPES FOR RECONCILIATION

It is a staple premise of the interfaith movement, which has been picking at the problem since the late 1800s, that if Muslim

Christians and Jews are ever to respect and understand one another, a key road leads through Abraham. Says Fisher of th

Conference of Catholic Bishops: "We can't not talk to each other about him." But identifying a path does not make it passab

Part of the problem, says Jon Levenson, a Harvard Jewish-studies professor who has examined affinities and conflicts in t

Abrahamic traditions, is that even before they went to work on him, his story featured a theme of exclusivity. "If you want

symbol for universal humanity, go to Adam," he says. "Don't go to Abraham, because his whole story is about the singling o

of one guy to found a new family, a distinct family marked off from the rest of humanity. He was always a particularis

Another stumbling block between Jews and Muslims is that they are working from two different texts.

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 Nonetheless, moderate Islamic leaders have periodically enlisted Abraham as a bridge builder. In 1977 Egypt's Preside

Anwar Sadat, announcing before the Israeli Knesset the brave initiative that would become the 1979 Camp David pea

accords, invoked, "Abraham—peace be upon him—great-grandfather of the Arabs and the Jews." Sadat noted that Abrahahad undertaken his great sacrifice "not out of weakness but through free will, prompted by an unshakable belief in the idea

that lend life a profound significance," clearly hoping that both sides would approach Arab-Israeli cohabitation in the sam

spirit. The accords went through, although this time a sacrifice was completed. Sadat was assassinated in 1981.

More recently, seeking a way to reach out to the U.S. that would pass the scrutiny of his nation's dogmatic clerics, modera

Iranian President Muhammad Khatami proposed a "dialogue of civilizations," with Abraham as common ground, in 199(The U.N.'s Kofi Annan subsequently adopted the gesture.) Observers assumed Khatami was crafting a smoke screen f

 political talks. But the former professor of Eastern and Western philosophy seems to regard Abraham as a mascot for h

comparatively humanistic, open-minded brand of Islam.

A more thoroughgoing theological initiative has been undertaken by the Catholic Church. Christianity's position on Abraha

had remained depressingly consistent since Justin Martyr's condemnation of the circumcised, but theologians at the Secon

Vatican Council of 1962-65, shaken by the Holocaust, reread Paul's letters. They noted that at one point Paul calls th

Covenant between God and the Jews irrevocable and that in one passage he compares Christians to a wild olive branch graft

onto the tree of Judaism. "If the Covenant between God and the children of Abraham dies," says Fisher, "the branch withe

with the roots. Christians would be orphans." The resulting Vatican II document rolled back centuries of anti-Judaism an began a rehabilitation of the notion of Abraham as a Jew. No one has pursued its spirit more avidly than Pope John Paul

who in March 2000 pressed a prayer card between blocks of Jerusalem's Western Wall: "God of our fathers, you cho

Abraham and his descendants to bring your name to the nations ... we wish to commit ourselves to genuine brotherhood withe people of the Covenant."

THE EFFECT OF SEPT. 11

Such rapprochement, especially involving Muslims, has been trickier in the past 12 months. Interfaith advocates say that aft

the attacks, many plans for Jewish-Muslim conversations fell through. One group that bucked the trend was the Children

Abraham Institute, a Charlottesville, Va., association that organizes intensive three-way scriptural studies modeled

Abraham's hospitality to the strangers at his tent. It has held meetings in Denver and at England's Cambridge University a

has sent representatives to lecture in Cape Town, South Africa, and parley with imams in Malaysia. It has the ear of th

incoming Archbishop of Canterbury. At one of its gatherings last October, University of Virginia professor of Islamic studi

Abdulaziz Sachedina expressed an interfaith ideal when he contended that people of faith can "control" their respecti

interpretations of Abraham's story "so that it doesn't become a source of demonization of the other."

As the anniversary of Sept. 11 passed, several new enterprises inaugurated similar efforts. In Portland, Ore., a group called t

Abraham Initiative began a two-year, citywide interfaith program. The venerable, Protestant-founded Chautauqua Institutiin upstate New York is starting an open-ended Abraham Program involving lectures and trifaith panels. A participant

several such efforts is Feiler. At the end of Abraham, its author announces that understanding how each faith, and seeming

each generation, concocts its own Abraham has liberated him to create his own, whom he whimsically calls "Abraham N241." This Abraham, he says, "is perceptive enough to know that his children will fight, murder (and) fly planes in

 buildings." But he also knows that "his children still crave God, still dream of a moment when they stand alongside o

another and pray for their lost father and for the legacy of peace among nations that was his initial mandate from heaven."

It is a historical oddity and a hopeful sign that as the three religions battled over Abraham, they continued (without admitti

it) to swap Abraham stories. The borrowings and counterborrowings, as old as the conflicts, make far more pleasant readin

The most heartening may be an Islamic tale cited by Feiler whose roots, scholar Reuven Firestone hypothesized, reach in

 both Judaism and Christianity. It is set after Abraham's near sacrifice of his son, whichever son it was. The moment of truth

 just past; the father's hand is stayed. As the boy lies stunned on the altar, God gazes down with pride and compassion an

 promises to grant his any prayer. "O Lord, I pray this," the boy says. "When any person in any era meets you at the gates

heaven—so long as they believe in one God—I ask that you allow them to enter paradise."

—With reporting by Azadeh Moavevi/Tehran, Nadia Mustafa/New York, Matt Rees and JamilHamad/Hebron and Eric Silver/ Jerusalem