• Tentang UGM
  • Portal Akademik
  • Pusat TI
  • Perpustakaan
  • Penelitian
Universitas Gadjah Mada
  • About Us
    • About CRCS
    • Vision & Mission
    • People
      • Faculty Members and Lecturers
      • Staff Members
      • Students
      • Alumni
    • Facilities
    • Library
  • Master’s Program
    • Overview
    • Curriculum
    • Courses
    • Schedule
    • Admission
    • Scholarship
    • Accreditation and Certification
    • Academic Collaborations
      • Crossculture Religious Studies Summer School
      • Florida International University
    • Academic Documents
    • Student Satisfaction Survey
  • Article
    • Perspective
    • Book Review
    • Event Report
    • Class Journal
    • Interview
    • Wed Forum Report
    • Thesis Review
    • News
  • Publication
    • Reports
    • Books
    • Newsletter
    • Monthly Update
    • Infographic
  • Research
    • CRCS Researchs
    • Resource Center
  • Community Engagement
    • Film
      • Indonesian Pluralities
      • Our Land is the Sea
    • Wednesday Forum
    • ICIR
    • Amerta Movement
  • Beranda
  • Headline
  • Perceiving Islam and Muslims in Poland in the context of the European refugee crisis

Perceiving Islam and Muslims in Poland in the context of the European refugee crisis

  • Headline, News, Wednesday Forum News
  • 12 April 2017, 16.21
  • Oleh:
  • 0


Abstract
The EU countries have been inefficiently managing the latest European migrant crisis, among them Poland was particularly unsuccessful. Contemporary discourse on refugees from the Middle East in Poland revolves around the following issues: the danger of altering Polish culture, the increase of the likelihood of terrorism, and the postulate of empathy towards people threatened by war. The religious factor plays a significant role in this discourse, since refugees who come from predominantly Muslim countries from a group of special interest in this Catholic-majority state. Halina Grzymała-Moszczyńska, Adam Anczyk, and Anna M. Maćkowiak have examined, qualitatively, how Poles perceive Islam, and how this image may be associated with attitudes towards refugees. The aim of this study was to analyze narratives about Islam and the religious Other, emerging from partially structured interviews. The questionnaire, containing citations from the Bible, the Quran, and the Bhagavad Gita served as the trigger for interviews conducted after filling it out.
Speaker
Anna M. Maćkowiak is a doctoral student at the Department of Phenomenology and Anthropology of Religion, Institute for the Study of Religions, Jagiellonian University, Krakow. Currently she is beginning to realization of her individual research grant (Preludium) concerning constructing meanings of selected Indonesian religious rituals by hosts, tourists, and travellers. Her academic interests and activities pertain also to inter-religious relations, religious syncretism, and the influence of religions on daily life of Indonesian and Poles.
Look at the full poster of the event here.

Tags: anna mackowiak europe migrants muslim poland refugee crisis

Leave A Comment Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

Instagram

To understand Iran, geopolitics alone is not enoug To understand Iran, geopolitics alone is not enough.
Behind every headline about war or sanctions lies a deeper landscape of history, memory, and moral imagination. In this conversation, Dicky Sofjan shows that contemporary conflicts involving Iran cannot be read only through the language of strategy and power. They must also be understood through the histories and symbols that continue to mobilize political and social meaning today.

Click the link in our bio to read the full interview.
Some changes in family life arrive quietly. In Yog Some changes in family life arrive quietly. In Yogyakarta and Ponorogo, more husbands cook, clean, and care for children, while still remaining the imam in the household. What shifts is not only labor but the meaning of leadership, belief, and marriage itself. A small domestic change opens a larger question about gender, religion, and the stories families tell about themselves.

Join the conversation at the #wednesdayforum with Alimatul Qibtiyah, March 11 at UGM or via livestream. We're offering a free iftar, so get there early! This event is free and open to the public.
What is well-being? Indonesia today: land taken, f What is well-being?
Indonesia today: land taken, forests cleared, plantations marching under the banner of food security. Officials call it progress, yet Indigenous ground tells another story. Baduy farmers keep ngahuma alive: rice, ritual, survival, all tied together. Wellbeing here isn’t profit. It’s balance when human and earth still holding on.

Join us for the next  #wednesdayforum discussion at the 3rd floor of the UGM Graduate School building. We're offering a free iftar, so please register. This event is free and open to the public.
yuk, pendaftaran sudah dibuka ... cek syarat-syara yuk, pendaftaran sudah dibuka ...
cek syarat-syaratnya ...
jika ada yang mau tanya-tanya,
langsung meluncur ke kolom komentar ya ...
Follow on Instagram

Twitter

Tweets by crcsugm

Universitas Gadjah Mada

Gedung Sekolah Pascasarjana UGM, 3rd Floor
Jl. Teknika Utara, Pogung, Yogyakarta, 55284
Email address: crcs@ugm.ac.id

 

© CRCS - Universitas Gadjah Mada

KEBIJAKAN PRIVASI/PRIVACY POLICY