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The Cornerstone Forum | fostering a whole-hearted faith in a half-hearted world

A view of multiculturalism from 1925

By Gil Bailie inBlog

Posted on: Apr 13, 2016

gkchesterton

The theory was that a Christian and a Mahometan might learn the same lessons in the same class, on ninety-nine subjects out of a hundred, so long as nobody mentioned Mahomet or mentioned Christ, It seems strange that nobody noticed the limitations of such a view. Men do not, indeed, talk incessantly at every dance or dinner-party on the subject of Mahomet. But men do occasionally talk about wine. Men do even in their wilder moments talk about wives. And the Moslem and the Christian must either be taught separately about wine and wives or they must be taught together at the expense of one religion or the other; or they must never be taught about wine or wives at all. The latter is what ought logically to follow from unsectarian education, though it seems a little defective as a detailed scheme of instruction about life

G K Chesteron

ChristianityG K ChestertonIslammulticultur
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