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Evolve

Podkast av by Jamil Khoury

engelsk

Nyheter og politikk

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Evolve is a podcast produced by Polycultural Institute that features thematic collections of spoken essays and lively conversations. The podcast invokes the spirited wisdom of today’s thinkers, changemakers, innovators, and disruptors. www.polyculturalinstitute.org

Alle episoder

8 Episoder

episode Part 1: Taking it to the Pews cover

Part 1: Taking it to the Pews

This episode was recorded on December 10th, 2025 This new Evolve collection, “The Re-Churching of America,” begins with a seemingly simple question: Is America re-churching, or are our religious communities and institutions continuing to decline? Surely there are indicators that point in both directions.If there is a resurgence—and that is what this collection is rooting for—what do we want the resurgence to look like, and not look like? How do we ensure that a re-churching of America doesn’t benefit fundamentalists, extremists, grifters, and those who appropriate faith to “sanctify” prejudice and inflict real harm on the people they tell you to hate?Our tag line for the collection is “Reviving Religious Life With the Knowledge We’ve Gained.” There is no denying that over the past century, Americans have gained inordinate knowledge from science, technology, and cultural interchange. We’ve acquired wisdom and understanding from movements for economic and racial justice, women’s and gay liberation, environmental stewardship, and collective struggles against war, imperialism, and colonialism, both at home and abroad.Although the series is rooted in a specifically Christian context, the goal of re-churching extends to mosques, synagogues, temples, gurdwaras, jamatkhanas, prayer halls, etc. We argue that a flourishing religious mosaic is vital not only to America’s soul but also to its security and success, and that any re-churching worthy of the name must reject fear and control in favor of love and healing. Thanks for reading! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support our work. In Part One, “Taking It To The Pews,” host Jamil Khoury reflects on the steep decline of religious participation in the United States. He asks what a healthier and more just resurgence of religious life could look like. He posits that America’s passage toward building a more perfect union must also include a more perfect church. In “perfection,” he sees an aspirational, ever-advancing goalpost. He also insists that church is not an arm of the state or a partisan project, but a “hospital for the soul,” a big tent where people seek God and one another beyond left–right labels. “Taking It To The Pews” is both a cautionary tale and an invitation: it names the trauma many have endured in religious institutions and affirms the right to leave any abusive community. At the same time, it urges listeners to consider seeking—or even building—houses of worship grounded in love, compassion, and belonging. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.polyculturalinstitute.org [https://www.polyculturalinstitute.org?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

7. feb. 2026 - 24 min
episode Part 7: United Syrian Federation cover

Part 7: United Syrian Federation

This episode was recorded on September 19th, 2025. After fourteen years of war, Syrians are pushing for a future that is post-Assad, post-Al Sharaa, post-sectarian—and definitively post-autocracy. In this episode, we lay out a distinctly Syrian path forward: a United Syrian Federation built on federalism, localism, and the right of historic communities to shape their own destinies free of coercion and domination. The United Syrian Federation explores one of the most contentious and consequential proposals in Syria’s reconstruction debate—federalism. While interim president Ahmed al-Sharaa champions centralization and national unity under a single authority, Alawite, Druze, and Kurdish communities, alongside regional actors, push for decentralized governance that recognizes Syria’s mosaic. The tension between these visions isn’t merely political theater; it’s a fundamental reckoning with Syria’s identity, its future, and whether repeating the mistakes of the Assad era can truly be avoided. United Syrian Federation makes the case for a federal Syria in language that is direct and decisive—what it is, what it isn’t, and why a robust but accountable central government can coexist with genuine regional self-rule. We consider the three regions demanding broad autonomy (Rojava; the coastal provinces of Latakia and Tartous; and the province of Sweida), the role of Syria’s great metropolitan “spine” (Aleppo–Hama–Homs–Damascus), and why centralized strongman politics have already proven catastrophic. Pointed, unsentimental, forward-looking. If you care about Syria’s future—and the difference between unity and uniformity—this episode is for you. Thanks for reading! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. Polycultural Institute is the Think-and-Create Tank of Chicago’s Silk Road Cultural Center. We generate art and ideas that promote polyculturalism and connect people, cultures, and communities. Polyculturalism is the theory that cultures continuously evolve and transform through dynamic interchange. It assumes that cultures are fluid and flexible, not static and fixed, and that as cultures interact, they redefine themselves. Silk Road Cultural Center is a Chicago-based interdisciplinary arts organization rooted in the modern communities of the historic Silk Roads, including our diaspora communities. We embrace the arts as a catalyst for connecting people, places, histories, and futures. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.polyculturalinstitute.org [https://www.polyculturalinstitute.org?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1] This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.polyculturalinstitute.org [https://www.polyculturalinstitute.org?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

26. okt. 2025 - 45 min
episode Part 6: A Cradle of Christianity cover

Part 6: A Cradle of Christianity

This episode was recorded on August 22nd, 2025."Because in Christendom, all roads lead to Syria” Host Jamil Khoury—Founder and Director of Polycultural Institute at Chicago’s Silk Road Cultural Center—threads personal history and deep scholarship to map a faith that took root in Damascus and Antioch and never stopped shaping the world. From St. Paul’s conversion on the road to Damascus to the rich mosaic of Eastern and Oriental Orthodox, Eastern and Roman Catholic, Protestant, Arab, Assyrian, Armenian, Chaldean, Greek, and Syriac traditions, Syria’s churches emerge as both ancient wellspring and modern bellwether. Khoury speaks passionately about persecution, the dhimmi legacy, and the staggering post-2011 exodus of Syrian Christians. He refuses eulogies. Instead, he argues for equal citizenship, constitutional guarantees, and a coalition of Christian and Muslim allies to stabilize communities and open pathways for return migration—permanent or periodic. The vision is unapologetically ambitious: a renaissance of Christians of the East that strengthens Syria’s pluralism, benefits all Syrians, and recommits the region to genuine coexistence. No euphemisms, no nostalgia—just a clear case for renewal, responsibility, and a Christian faith that still breathes in Arabic. Along the way, Khoury draws hard lessons from the near-total exile of Syrian Jewry, insisting that Syria’s future must welcome back the very communities that made its culture cosmopolitan. If you care about heritage, human dignity, and the rebuilding of a country’s moral architecture, start here. Thanks for listening! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support our work. Polycultural Institute is the Think-and-Create Tank of Chicago’s Silk Road Cultural Center. We generate art and ideas that promote polyculturalism and connect people, cultures, and communities. Polyculturalism is the theory that cultures continuously evolve and transform through dynamic interchange. It assumes that cultures are fluid and flexible, not static and fixed, and that as cultures interact, they redefine themselves. Silk Road Cultural Center is a Chicago-based interdisciplinary arts organization rooted in the modern communities of the historic Silk Roads, including our diaspora communities. We embrace the arts as a catalyst for connecting people, places, histories, and futures.This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.polyculturalinstitute.org [https://www.polyculturalinstitute.org?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1] This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.polyculturalinstitute.org [https://www.polyculturalinstitute.org?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

13. sep. 2025 - 40 min
episode Part 5: Al Sharaa and Company Must Go cover

Part 5: Al Sharaa and Company Must Go

This episode was recorded on August 1st, 2025. This episode of Evolve marks Part Five of the Rebuilding Syria collection. It examines the role of Syria’s interim president, Ahmad Al Sharaa, in recent sectarian massacres targeting Alawite, Druze, and Christian communities. The episode details documented attacks in Lattakia, Tartus, Damascus, and Sweida—including the killing of civilians, sexual violence, religious persecution, and the destruction of homes, hospitals, and houses of worship.The episode challenges claims that Al Sharaa represents a pragmatic turn from jihadist violence. It cites his 2014 statements endorsing a Sunni Islamist theocracy. Evidence of regime-directed or sanctioned violence - or at best, a total disregard for the lives of Syria’s diverse communities - is highlighted and condemned. This includes Al Sharaa's response to the massacres on Syria’s coast, in Sweida province, and at Saint Elias Orthodox Church in Damascus. The manipulation of state media to dehumanize and persecute those deemed infidels, and the constant disconnect between Al Sharaa's moderate statements and the actions of his fighters, are all explored.The podcast argues that Al Sharaa’s regime represents a continuation of Syria’s cycle of extremist governance—this time under the banner of Sunni supremacist ideology. It explores how religious and ethnic communities are being driven out, kidnapped, and killed, how gender-based violence is being utilized as a weapon of war, how Sunni Muslim diversity of thought is being suppressed, and how the international response has largely failed to reckon with the regime’s actions. Thanks for reading! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support our work. Polycultural Institute is the Think-and-Create Tank of Chicago’s Silk Road Cultural Center. We generate art and ideas that promote polyculturalism and connect people, cultures, and communities. Polyculturalism is the theory that cultures continuously evolve and transform through dynamic interchange. It assumes that cultures are fluid and flexible, not static and fixed, and that as cultures interact, they redefine themselves. Silk Road Cultural Center is a Chicago-based interdisciplinary arts organization rooted in the modern communities of the historic Silk Roads, including our diaspora communities. We embrace the arts as a catalyst for connecting people, places, histories, and futures.This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.polyculturalinstitute.org [https://www.polyculturalinstitute.org?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1] This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.polyculturalinstitute.org [https://www.polyculturalinstitute.org?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

16. aug. 2025 - 31 min
episode Part 4: The New Guy In Charge cover

Part 4: The New Guy In Charge

This episode was recorded on June 18th, 2025. It is important to note that the content presented was written before the June 22nd terrorist attack on Saint Elias Orthodox Church in Damascus and July’s ongoing massacres of Druze communities in Sweida. As a result, Jamil Khoury’s analysis of the situation continues to evolve and will be addressed in the next episode. That said, this episode provides a solid window into Khoury’s thinking about Al Sharaa and lays the foundation for later inquiry. For the first time in decades, Syrians are speaking freely. In coffee shops, classrooms, and village squares, voices once silenced by tyranny are rising—bold, unscripted, and full of possibility. The fall of Assad has cracked open the door to something Syrians haven’t tasted in generations: hope.But who’s standing in that doorway? Thanks for reading! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. The New Guy in Charge, the fourth installment in the Rebuilding Syria collection, takes us into the heart of that question. Interim President Ahmed Al Sharaa—once Abu Mohammed Al Jolani, jihadist commander and globally-designated terrorist—now wears a tailored suit and speaks the language of democracy, economic growth, and pluralism. A man with a deeply violent past is suddenly being cast as the architect of Syria’s rebirth.Can a country so deeply wounded afford to believe in such a dramatic transformation? Or is Al Sharaa simply a wolf in reformer’s clothing?This episode wrestles with the beautiful and dangerous thing that is hope—how it lives in the bones of a battered people, how it conjures mosaics where extremists see only monoliths, and how the intrinsic need for hope can be exploited by those who talk a good game. And, perhaps most importantly, it explores Ahmed Al Sharaa’s past and why we should not take him only by his current, cosmopolitan appearance.Listen in as the dream of a freer Syria collides with the shadows surrounding its new leader. An uncertain future hangs in the balance. his episode invites listeners to see not just the shards—but the artistry—in a country often viewed only through the lens of conflict. Polycultural Institute is the Think-and-Create Tank of Chicago’s Silk Road Cultural Center. We generate art and ideas that promote polyculturalism and connect people, cultures, and communities. Polyculturalism is the theory that cultures continuously evolve and transform through dynamic interchange. It assumes that cultures are fluid and flexible, not static and fixed, and that as cultures interact, they redefine themselves. Silk Road Cultural Center is a Chicago-based interdisciplinary arts organization rooted in the modern communities of the historic Silk Roads, including our diaspora communities. We embrace the arts as a catalyst for connecting people, places, histories, and futures. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.polyculturalinstitute.org [https://www.polyculturalinstitute.org?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1] This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.polyculturalinstitute.org [https://www.polyculturalinstitute.org?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

19. juli 2025 - 24 min
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