By JENNIFER K. BAUER jkbauer@inland360.com
“My liberal friends say, ‘Why do you have to show the dark side?’ ” of religions like Buddhism and Hinduism, which are based on ethics of tolerance and acceptance, says Gier, 70, who taught religion and philosophy at the University of Idaho for 31 years. “I think that’s the obligation of a scholar. Even saints have faults and clay feet.”
Gier’s new book, “The Origins of Religious Violence, an Asian Perspective,” is a scholarly overview of religiously motivated violence in Asia from medieval times to the post-colonial era. The idea caught Gier’s attention in 1992 when he was on sabbatical in India. Mark Twain called India the land of “a thousand religions and two million gods.” People of different faiths there have lived and worshiped together harmoniously for centuries. This is “Gandhi’s India,” Gier says. That’s what he expected and saw, but while he was there Hindu nationalists destroyed a Muslim mosque and he began to question his belief in “the peace of the East.”
For the next 25 years he explored Eastern religious violence, concluding that much Asian religious conflict began after colonial penetration. Europeans introduced the Christian tenet that their religion is based on pure revelation from God, unadulterated by other religions. In other words, the one true religion.
“Fundamentalists of all persuasions have this in common,” Gier says. “Once you establish this mentality, it is bound to cause conflict.”
Here’s a sample of stories he relates:
Nick Gier will discuss and sign copies of his book, “The Origins of Religious Violence, an Asian Perspective,” at 11 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 18 at BookPeople of Moscow. Hardcover copies of Gier’s book will be for sale for $50. A $35 paperback version will be released in spring 2015.
The store will also feature several other authors that day.
Noon — Boise author F.A. (Floyd) Loomis with his novel, “Raven’s Winter,” set in rural Idaho in 1958. Loomis is a former financial journalist and owner of a small Seattle press.
1:30 p.m. — Anesa Miller of Moscow with “Our Orbit,” a novel about an Appalachian foster family that faces cultural issues after taking in a motherless girl whose militia-wannabe father is imprisoned.
3 p.m. — Corrie Williamson with her first poetry book, “Sweet Husk.” Williams teaches writing at Helena College and Carroll College in Montana.
BookPeople is at 521 S. Main St.