cover image You Don’t Have to Be Wrong for Me to Be Right: Finding Faith Without Fanaticism

You Don’t Have to Be Wrong for Me to Be Right: Finding Faith Without Fanaticism

Brad Hirschfield, . . Harmony, $24.95 (271pp) ISBN 978-0-307-38297-9

In this compelling and engaging volume, Hirschfield urges people of all faiths to accept their differences while seeking commonality and reaching out to one another with love and forgiveness. As an Orthodox rabbi, Hirschfield bases his faith on Jewish tradition, yet he draws on his unusually varied upbringing in a secular home to implement his own strategies and theories for living a fulfilling life, and is not afraid to reference Jesus or Muhammad as great teachers. In his teens, Hirschfield joined a small group of fanatical Jewish settlers defending Hebron, but renounced that way of life after witnessing a scene of inexplicable and unrepentant violence. Now he posits that there is room for more than one religious or moral viewpoint to be correct. Hirschfield integrates this thesis with many personal anecdotes to keep the text alive and interesting. He shares his memories of participating in the groundbreaking ceremony for a synagogue rebuilt near Auschwitz, and he remembers taking part in a meeting of the Islamic Society of North America. At times, the text feels a bit longwinded, but Hirschfield’s admirable objective of expanding ourselves to let others in comes across nicely and should attract a wide interfaith audience. (Jan.)