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The big idea of the Interfaith Youth Core is simple.
In a world of increasing interaction between people
from different religious backgrounds, the big question is,
is that interaction going to be conflict or cooperation?
And there are a lot of people in the world right now
who are invested in conflict.
And those people are very good at recruiting and training
young people to be the foot soldiers of that conflict.
And what the Interfaith Youth Core seeks to be
is a movement that recruits and trains and inspires
and networks young people to be bridges of interfaith cooperation
rather than the bombs of religious destruction.
My goal ultimately is to play a role at helping
interfaith cooperation become a social norm.
Over the past half century,
environmentalism has become a social norm.
Multi-culturalism has become a social norm.
Volunteerism has become a social norm.
What I mean by that is that you could walk out into the street
tap someone on the shoulder and say, “environmentalism”,
and they’d have an idea.
And they would have a notion of how they could participate,
whether it’s by recycling or driving a hybrid car.
I would like interfaith cooperation be the same thing.
That large part of the world that feels like they have
a common vision when it comes to
people with different religions,
building better relations with each other.
And they feel like they can participate in that.
And I believe everybody can.
It’s a great honor to be with you at
the University of Louisville.
It’s been a life long dream to be associated
with the Grawemeyer Awards and to have been
awarded the religion prize, it feels like not only
like a great honor but like a great responsibility,
which I hope to spend the next half century of
my life trying to even half earn.
So, thank you for the privilege and the honor
and the new found responsibility.