Rachel Newcomb–Eliza Griswold's 'The Tenth Parallel' uncovers Muslim/Christian complexities

A contributing reporter for The New Yorker, Harper’s and The New York Times Magazine, Griswold is deft at interweaving historical details with her narrative. Subtitled “Dispatches From the Fault Line Between Christianity and Islam,” the book ranges from bombed-out Mogadishu suburbs in Somalia to the Jakarta, Indonesia, neighborhoods where former jihadis peddle Prophet-sanctioned medicines.

In Africa, she interviews public figures: evangelist Franklin Graham on a visit to Sudan, and Somali warlords with connections to al-Qaida.

Grisworld does some of her best reporting in Indonesia and Malaysia, where her depiction of the lives of average people caught in the cross hairs of wider geopolitical conflicts is devastating. She writes movingly of indigenous Malaysians who continue to resist conversion by both world religions, in the face of an assault to their environment and livelihoods.

For Griswold, whose father was the Episcopal bishop of Chicago, religion is personal. Yet she finds her own conflicts as someone coming from a decidedly more liberal faith tradition than the ones she encounters.

Read it all.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Culture-Watch, * Religion News & Commentary, Books, Episcopal Church (TEC), Islam, Muslim-Christian relations, Other Churches, Other Faiths, Religion & Culture

2 comments on “Rachel Newcomb–Eliza Griswold's 'The Tenth Parallel' uncovers Muslim/Christian complexities

  1. Old Pilgrim says:

    Yet more Liberal “anecdotal” “evidence”. This is not a good time to waffle.

  2. Hursley says:

    Curious that her father is identified as only the former “Episcopal bishop [sic for capitalization] of Chicago,” and not his much larger role as Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church. Maybe it would have made her look too much like an “insider”?