Faith in the City: interviews with WUF10 participants (Part 4)
Nasim found the Faith and Urban Resilience Workshop on LinkedIn and spontaneously joined the group, then also participated WUF10, which took place simultaneously. Nasim participates in socioeconomic events, charity activities, and volunteer works relevant to art, music, history of Palestine, and children education. She believes in Allah and her religion is Islam. Nasim was raised as a Muslim and when she came into adulthood, she wondered how her beliefs could possibly be integrated with modernity and advanced technology. A quote describing Islam crossed her mind, which says, “Islam is valid for every time and place.” After some practices, much of her wondering was gone. That concluded the power of acceptance and adaptation in her relations with her religion. Nasim sees faith as the pilot and people as airplanes. If anything goes wrong with the pilot of the plane, that will certainly expose the plane to danger. At the end, all is between Allah’s hands, the pilot, and the plane. But the pilot (faith) should be there for a safe and exciting flight (life). Nasim’s faith motivates her to do the right thing, to help those in need, to respect differences, and to be a positive and supportive part of other’s lives. Though Nasim is still young, I was impressed with her thoughtful contributions and provocative thoughts as she Most of the common male enhancement pills help increase testosterone naturally, making them a viable choice amerikabulteni.com levitra sale for those who suffer from low libido. So, quit on line viagra http://amerikabulteni.com/2018/06/16/sohretin-karanlik-yuzu/ smoking and combat with erectile dysfunction. Drug rehab programs facilitate order levitra without prescription a permanent addiction recovery process. The main advantage associated with these medicines they can get following benefits: Ability to achieve an erection Power of sustaining an erection sufficient for sexual intercourse. cheap sildenafil tablets participated with a much older group of professors, theologians, and practitioners. We look forward to seeing Nasim at WUF11!
That concludes my spontaneous yet inspiring interviews with a sampling of eight very diverse people. Were we to continue and sample a larger segment of WUF10 participants, I believe we would be surprised even more how much faith and belief plays a part in the motivation and inspiration for people to contribute towards “The City We Need.” It is imperative that faith leaders are mobilized to explore and discover what their holy writings have to say about cities and all its complexities. It is crucial for these leaders to rally their faith communities to actively engage with the implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals and the New Urban Agenda. With 80-85% of the world’s population adhering to some kind of faith or religion, it is these beliefs that can fuel the flame for tomorrow’s cities. Afterall, what would the cities of the future be if they had no soul?