“Coming Together in Conversation” — The Revealer’s April 2023 Issue

In his editor’s letter, Brett Krutzsch reflects on the potential power in conversations by considering how Passover encourages us to approach the world through asking questions: “The process of asking questions and talking is literally the first step to taking action to improve our world.”

This month’s Revealer issue acts on this approach by facilitating dialogues around many of the issues in the world today. It opens with an article examining an area of India where officials are trying to stop the intermingling of people from different religious communities. In “Forbidden Transactions Between Muslims and Hindus in Gujarat, India,” Sabah Gurmat investigates what is happening in one Indian state where officials can and do forbid Hindus and Muslims from selling property to each other – and what that law foretells about India’s future.

Next, in “My Father’s Hardest Fight: Assisted Suicide and Hinduism” Puloma Mukherjee reflects on what happened when her father told her pious mother that he wanted to die, and what the entire family subsequently learned about Hindu positions on physician-assisted suicide.

Then, in “Black Religion, Psychiatry, and the Crossroads Project,” contributing editor Kali Handelman has a conversation with distinguished scholar of African American religious history Judith Weisenfeld about Weisenfeld’s newest research on the history of white psychiatrists diagnosing Black Americans as mentally ill because of their religious experiences.

Following that, in “Tragedy, Spirituality, and Black Justice” two scholars of African American religions, Vincent Lloyd and Terrence Johnson, have a conversation with each other about their recent books that explore religion within Black protest movements.

Then, in “Women Talking and Reimagining the World,” Christina Pasqua and Pamela Klassen review the movie Women Talking and share why the film, focused mostly on scenes of women conversing in community, is so effective, and how it reflects and diverges from the real-life Mennonite community on which the movie is based.

And, in “Worried White Evangelicals,” Sarah Diefendorf shares an excerpt from her book The Holy Vote: Inequality and Anxiety among White Evangelicals, where an evangelical community comes together following Donald Trump’s inauguration with much to say and with many concerns.

Our April issue also includes a conversation with Sarah Diefendorf for the newest episode of the Revealer podcast: “Evangelicals’ Anxieties and Their Politics.” We discuss why many white evangelicals, despite their political power, feel threatened by feminism, LGBTQ progress, and movements for racial justice. We explore their image problem among younger Americans, how they are recruiting new people to join their churches, and how white evangelicals are responding to issues like Black Lives Matter and LGBTQ equality today. You can listen to our conversation on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.