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Interfaith Movement's Hidden Agenda

Jun 5, 2025

The Interfaith Movement is often praised for promoting harmony among religious groups, but beneath its language of peace and cooperation lies a coordinated effort to undermine Christianity and Judaism—while advancing Islamic supremacy and far-left political agendas. Framed as a noble effort to foster unity, the movement pressures faith leaders and communities to embrace a form of ideological conformity that brands resistance as bigotry. Activists like Mara Richards Bim, George A. Mason, Yasir Qadhi, and Amanda Tyler exemplify how this movement leverages religious platforms to push progressive politics, often through organizations like the Interfaith Center of New York and Neighborly Faith. These alliances subtly shift spiritual focus away from scriptural truth and toward secular activism rooted in socialist and Islamic supremacist ideologies.


Historically grounded in early 20th-century Christian socialism, the movement gained momentum through institutions like the World Council of Churches and the National Council of Churches, both of which supported Marxist causes under the banner of liberation theology. Post-9/11, Islamic organizations such as ISNA and CAIR exploited interfaith initiatives to shield themselves from scrutiny, using them to legitimize Sharia-aligned goals. This tactic aligns with a 1991 Muslim Brotherhood memorandum uncovered during the Holy Land Foundation trial, which outlines a plan for “civilization jihad”—a strategy to infiltrate and dismantle Western systems from within. Today, the movement fuses leftist grievance politics with religious language to dismantle faith-based resistance and empower radical elements. Figures like Imam Omar Suleiman, who has publicly denounced India’s government and accused its leadership of fascism and genocide, illustrate how interfaith dialogue is often a façade for ideological warfare aimed at silencing dissent and remaking religious identity along politically expedient lines.


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SOURCE: RAIR Foundation

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