The lessons we learn when we are young, Eboo Patel writes, determine the commitments we carry the rest of our
lives. Even so, many organizations only pay lip service to the importance of youth programs; few devote substantial
time and effort to them.
But there is a segment of our world that fully understands that young people are a combustible combination of power
and fragility. Preachers in the bigotry-driven Christian Identity movement pay special attention to young people.
Yitzhak Rabin's assassin was a twenty-five-year-old observant Jew. Muslim extremists run madrasas with the clear-cut
goal of teaching youth that violence is the answer. Youth programs are the focus of the institutions created by
these religious totalitarians and at the center of their strategies. All too often, young people are the perpetrators
of the devastating acts of violence that define these groups.
Acts of Faith interweaves accounts of how religious totalitarian groups engage youth with Patel's own story of
growing up Muslim and angry in America. His unique understanding of the importance of positively engaging religious
youth led him to found the Interfaith Youth Core, an energetic organization that seeks to counter religious totalitarianism
by building an interfaith, pluralistic youth movement. Addressing the key questions of this emerging movement,
Patel shows us how to engage religious conservatives and, most importantly, how to positively focus the fires of
youth.
"Eboo Patel is an exciting new voice of a new America. Diverse but not divisive, hopeful but not utopian.
He is an American Indian whose roots are not in South Dakota but in South Asia, and he speaks for allof us from
a rising generation of bright, brown and bold Americans who have much to offer a country embarking on a new millennium
and in need of new blood."
�Shaykh Hamza Yusuf, executive director of the Zaytuna Institute
"Eboo Patel has crafted an elegantly written and brilliantly argued manifesto -- a call to arms, really --
about the importance, not of interfaith dialogue, but of interfaith cooperation. His thesis is simple: children
are not born to hate; hatred is taught to them. And in a time when religion is used increasingly to justify bigotry
and violence, it is up to people of faith everywhere who believe in peace, and tolerance, and pluralism, to stand
up to those who preach hatred in the name of God. Acts of Faith is more than a book, it is an awakening of the
mind. It should be required reading for all Americans."
�Reza Aslan, author of No god but God: The Origins, Evolution, and Future of Islam
Eboo Patel, Ph.D., is the founder and executive director of the Interfaith Youth Core, an international nonprofit
building the interfaith youth movement. His media appearances include CNN Sunday Morning, NPR's Morning Edition,
and the PBS documentary Three Faiths, One God. He lives in Chicago, Illinois.