Interfaith

St. Edith Stein

The Stranger and the Self

There is a moment in every genuine encounter with another person – another culture, another faith, another way of understanding the world – when the encounter ceases to be comfortable and becomes, instead, productive. This is the moment when the other stops being a curiosity to be examined from a safe distance and becomes, instead, a challenge to the categories I have been using to organize my own experience.

I call this the moment of unsettlement. And I believe it is the most important moment in any interaction across difference, because it is the moment when understanding – genuine understanding, not the polite recognition of difference that passes for understanding in most multicultural discourse – becomes possible.

Interfaith Dialogue
St. Edith Stein

On Holding Multiple Identities

I have lived, across the course of a single life, inside more identities than most institutions are comfortable acknowledging in a single person.

I was born Jewish, into a family that observed the traditions with a seriousness that shaped everything I would later become. I became, through philosophical inquiry, an atheist – not casually, but rigorously, as a consequence of the questions I was asking and the answers I was finding. I became, through a process I can describe but not fully explain, a Catholic, and eventually a Carmelite nun. I was, throughout all of this, a philosopher – a student of Husserl, a scholar of phenomenology, a thinker who could not stop thinking even when thinking led to places that were inconvenient for the identities I inhabited.

Interfaith Dialogue