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Chapter 6-Key Issue 3 Why Do Religions Organize Space in Distinctive Patterns? Places of Worship Christians-church (from Greek term for lord, master, power) Church Architecture • Early churches modeled after Roman buildings for public assembly-basilicas • Rectangular building• Raised alter • Eastern Orthodox churches-architectural style Byzantine Empire (5th century)-highly ornate with prominent domes • Muslim Mosques-viewed as a location for community assembly for worship • Central courtyard; pulpit faces east-Makkah • Minarets- towers that surround mosques-it is in these minarets that people are summoned to worship known as muzzan Hindu Temples/Buddhist and Shintoist Pagodas • Hindu temple-home or more than on god • Appears as a shrine • Typically small, dimly lit interior room • Contains a symbolic artifact or image of the god • Pagodas are indicative of Buddhist/Shinto religion • Tall many-sided towers arranged in tiers, balconies, slanting roofs • Contains relics believed to be portions of Buddha’s body or clothing Baha’i Houses of Worship • Built 7 Houses of Worship in Wilmette, IL; Frankfurt, Germany; Sydney, Australia; New Delhi, India; Apia, Western Samoa; Panama City, Panama; Ashkabad, Russia; & Kampala, Uganda • These houses of worship dispersed to different continents to dramatize Baha’i as a universalizing religion with adherents all over the world Sacred Space • Burial practices vary in different religions • Usually occurs in a cemetery for Christians, Mulims, Jews • Ancient Romeunderground passages known as catacombsearly Christians buried here • Some countries (China) need their land for agriculture rather than cemeteries, so cremation is encouraged • Hindus use cremation rather than burial • Hindus wash body first with water from Ganges River • Cremation considered act of purification Cremation (continued) • Motivation for cremation comes from unwillingness of nomads to leave their dead behind for fear that body would be attacked from wild animals or evil spirits • It was believed that cremation could free soul from body for departure to afterworld • Zoroastrians expose dead to scavenging birds & animals • Did not want body to contaminate sacred elements of fire, earth, or water • Tibetan Buddhists practice this exposure with cremation reserved for the most exalted priests Religious Settlements • Salt Lake Cityconstruction in 1848 by Mormons-prophet Joseph Smithconsidered to be a utopian settlement • Early New England settlers members of Puritan Protestant denomination • Roman Catholic immigrants have given religious place names or toponyms to their settlements in New World particularly in Quebec and southwest U.S. Hierarchial Religions • Hierarchial religion has well-defined geographic structure & organizes territory in local administrative structure • Roman Catholicism is a great example of this hierarchial religion • Roman Catholics organized into an administrative structure accountable to Pope in Rome (Vatican City) • Pope-bishop of the Diocese of Rome • Archbishops report to Pope-each heads province which is a group of dioceses Roman Catholic Hierarchy • Archbishop is bishop of one diocese within province • Some distinguished archbishops elevated to rank of cardinal • Reporting to each archbishop are bishopseach administers a diocese • Diocese-several thousand of these • Diocese basic unit of geographic organization in Roman Catholic Church • Bishop’s headquarters called “see”-largest city in diocese • Diocese spatially divided into parishes, each headed by priest Hierarchial Religions (continued) • Latter-Day SaintsMormons exercise strong organization of landscape • Territory occupied by Mormons in Utah & portions of surrounding states organized into wards with a population of 750 each • Autonomous religions • Islam has most autonomy • Strong unity within Islamic world with high degree of communication & migration • Protestant denomination selects leadership within various sects, such as Presbyterian Protestant Denominations • Presbyterian organized into presbytery which are governed by synod with general assembly as ultimate authority over all churches • Each Presbyterian church governed by elected board of directors with lay members • Episcopalian, Lutheran, Methodist churches have hierarchial structures Ethnic Religions • Judaism and Hinduism-no centralized structure of religious control • In Judaism, in order to conduct full service, requires presence of 10 adult males • Hinduism-autonomous-worship is done usually alone or with others in the household • Share ideas through pilgrimages and reading traditional writings Key Issue 4-Chapter 6 • Afghans welcomed Taliban (“religious students”) in 1996 • Once in control, Taliban imposed very strict laws (for example, men beaten for shaving their beards, stoned for committing adultery, homosexuals-buried alive, prostitutes hanged in front of large crowds, thieves had hands cut off, & women wearing nail polish had their fingers cut off) • Islamic scholars criticized Taliban as poorly educated and misreading Koran Taliban Versus Western Values • Taliban believed they had been called by Allah to do these things • Western (non-Islamic) ideas banned • Converted soccer stadium into settings for executions and floggings • Old Buddhist statues destroyed 2001 because they were worshipped as images in violation of Islam Hinduism Versus Social Equality • Hinduism maintains a rigid caste system (people are categorized according to their specific caste) • Dates back to 1500 B.C. when Aryans invaded India • Brahmans (priests & top administrators/scholars) • Kshatriyas-warriors • Vaisyas-merchants • Sudras-agricultural workers or artisans • Untouchables or outcasts Eastern Orthodox Christianity • 1721 Czar Peter the Great made Russian Orthodox Church part of the government • Following Bolshevik revolution in 1917 (which overthrew czar or tsar) Communist government pursued nonreligious programs • Marxism (Karl Marx) became official doctrine of Soviet Union • End of communist rule in late 20th century brought a religious revival to region formerly called Soviet Union Religion Versus Communism • Buddhists were hurt by Vietnam War in late 60s early 70s • U.S. raids in Laos & Cambodia destroyed many Buddhist shrines • Others were vandalized by Vietnamese & Khmer Rouge Cambodian communists • To protest these actions by the Communists Buddhists immolated (burned) themselves • Current Communist governments in Southeast Asia have discouraged religious activities & permitted monuments to decay, specifically Angkor Wat in Cambodia which is considered one of the world’s most beautiful Buddhist structures Religious Wars in Middle East • Conflict in this region has existed for over 2000 years • Christians & Muslims have fought over a small strip of land in Eastern Mediterranean • Jews, Christians, and Muslims all trace their origins to Abraham in Old Testament • 3 religions have found it difficult to peaceably share the same territory • Judaism makes their claim to the territory it calls the Promised Land • Romans controlled area which they called Palestine-dispersed Jews from Palestine-only a few were allowed to stay in region Middle East (Southwest Asia) • Islam replaced • Muslims consnider Christianity in Jerusalem as their 3rd Palestine after Muslim holiest city (after army conquered in 7th Mecca-Makkah & century A.D. Medina-Madinah) Christians consider because this is the Palestine to be the place from which Holy Land and Muhammad is Jerusalem the Holy thought to have City ascended to heaven Crusades • 7th century, Muslims aka Arabs captured most of Middle East including Palestine & Jerusalem • Arab army diffused Arabic language across Middle East & converted people from Christianity to Islam • Also moved across North Africa and invaded Europe at Gibraltar Crusades • In East captured Eastern Orthodox Christianity’s most important city, Constaninople (present day Istanbul, Turkey) • To recapture Holy Land from Muslim conquerors, European Christians set out on military campaigns known as Crusades over a 150 year period Jews Versus Muslims-Palestine • Muslim Ottoman Empire controlled Palestine for 2 centuries (1516-1917) • Great Britain took over Palestine (League of Nations and later from United Nations) • United Nations partitioned Palestine into 2 independent states, one Jewish, one Muslim • Controversy over control of Gaza Strip, Golan Heights, West Bank continue to plague the region Palestinian and Israeli Perspective • Palestinian fight against Israel coordinated by PLO (Palestinian Liberation Organization) under leadership of Yassir Arafat (who is now deceased) • Israel sees itself as a small country with Jewish majority surrounded by hostile Muslim Arabs • Country’s major population centers close to international borders making them vulnerable to attacks • Tel Aviv and Haifa very close to Palestinian controlled territory Israelia Palestinain Conflict • Local landforms create geographical problems • Ultimate obstacle to peace in Middle East is status of Jerusalem • All groups have difficulty coexisting with each other • Constant violence in region, suicide bomber/car bombs, etc. Religious Wars in Ireland • Ireland (island of Eire)-Republic of Ireland which occupies five-sixths of island is 92% Roman Catholic • Island’s northern one-sixth part of the UK rather than Ireland is 58% Protestant and 42% Roman Catholic • Small number of Roman Catholics in Northern Ireland and Republic of Ireland joined the Irish Republican Army (IRA)-a militant organization dedicated to achieving Irish national unity