The 5X社区 community attended a virtual event on Feb. 22 in which Tatsushi (Tats) Arai, Ph.D., an associate professor of peace and conflict studies and a peacebuilding scholar, addressed the challenging questions: what is hatred, where does it come from and how do you overcome it?
Arai hopes that this presentation, entitled 鈥淒ialogue on Hatred: A Peacebuilder鈥檚 Perspective,鈥 will inspire participants to begin dialogues on the issue of hatred and how to dismantle it.
The event was a continuation of the year-long initiative 鈥Dialogue and Difference: A New Understanding鈥 designed to engage the Kent State community and advance our core values of freedom of expression, respect, and kindness in all we do.
The Division of People, Culture and Belonging is partnering with the School of Peace and Conflict Studies and the Division of Student Life to deliver the series of educational programs that features diverse perspectives and aims to help us better understand each other.
Amoaba Gooden, Ph.D., the vice president of People, Culture and Belonging, introduced Arai, and Sandra Morgan, director of strategic partnerships and outreach for the College of Arts and Sciences at Kent State, who was the moderator.
The dialogue took place in the context of how campus life in the U.S. 鈥渋s a microcosm of identity-based differences, capable of providing a promising ground for dialogue and mutual learning.鈥
But these same differences can become a 鈥渂asis for identity-based discrimination, stereotyping and hatred when members of the campus communities internalize the polarizing effects of political divisions, international conflicts and/or other powerful forces in society.鈥
Arai, a peacebuilding scholar-practitioner with 25 years of international experience, reflected on the sources and nature of hatred in the context of identity-based conflict. He reflected on his personal experiences during his years of international peacebuilding, as well as the journeys of others whose urge for hatred were able to transform themselves into "giants in social change."
Arai told the story of how as a middle school student in 1984, he and his classmates met with victims of radiation sickness leftover from the atomic bombs dropped in Japan in 1945. He was shocked when one of the victims, a housewife, told him that she did not hate Americans who dropped the bombs. The woman urged Arai to become a leader who promotes co-existence. Arai was moved by this woman's commitment.
鈥淏ecause of one housewife's commitment you see a peacebuilder speaking to you,鈥 he said.
鈥淒ialogue and Difference鈥 kicked off Feb. 1 at Kent State鈥檚 annual Martin Luther King Celebration with 鈥淢LK and Me: Living a Life of Love and Peace During Conflict鈥 held in the Kent Student Center Ballroom.
Members of the Kent State community are encouraged to mark their calendars for these upcoming events:
- 鈥淎cademic Freedom and Freedom of Expression鈥 will occur at 3:30 p.m. on March 5 in the Governance Chambers on the second floor of the Kent Student Center. This session will be led by Tracy Laux, senior lecturer of mathematical sciences and chair of Faculty Senate; Amy Reynolds, Ph.D., dean of the College of Communication and Information; and Deborah Smith, Ph.D., professor of philosophy and president of Kent State鈥檚 Chapter of American Association of University Professors, Tenure Track Unit.
- 鈥淐ultural and Religious Identity: A Faculty Conversation鈥 will take place at 4 p.m. on March 12. The virtual event will include Rick Feinberg, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus of Anthropology; Chaya Kessler, director of the Jewish Studies Program and senior lecturer of Hebrew; Babacar M鈥橞aye, Ph.D., professor and chair of the Department of English; and Lydia Rose, Ph.D., associate professor of sociology. Registration will be available soon on the Dialogue and Difference website.
Additional Dialogue and Difference programs titled 鈥淯nderstanding and Combatting Antisemitism鈥 and 鈥淯nderstanding and Combatting Islamophobia鈥 will be scheduled.
View the full list of events in the Dialogue and Difference series.