Back to Show
Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly
Diana Eck
In 1965, a change in the law opened up the US to millions of new immigrants from Asia, Africa, and the Middle East. They brought their religions with them and — although they are still only a small percentage of the overall population — in the words of Diana Eck of Harvard University, “We are now religious in so many different ways than we ever imagined before that it takes our breath away.”
Support Provided By
25:52
The Supreme Court 2016; Amish Grace; Eid al-Fitr
25:55
Religion and Presidential Politics 2016; Mormon Welfare Program; Quakers in Costa Rica
25:52
Religious Responses to Orlando Massacre; Evangelicals and Donald Trump; Refugees in Utah
0:38
Doctors and End-of-Life Discussions; Saint Benedict’s Preparatory School
26:46
Payday Lenders; Women’s Mosque of America; Packing Meals for the Hungry
26:40
Candidates Reach Out to Evangelicals; Christian Healthcare Sharing; The Jesuit Volunteers
26:40
Mississippi “Religious Freedom” Law; Ethical Obligations to Displaced People; Nepal
25:46
Evangelicals and Campaign 2016; Sagebrush Rebellion; Jews in Cochin, India
25:52
Arbitration by Faith; Faith Films; Holocaust Remembrance: Reading the Names
25:55
Christians & Anti-Muslim Rhetoric; Extraterrestrial Intelligent Life; Holocaust Survivor
25:12
Digital Addiction; Diane Rehm on Assisted Suicide; Selling Chametz for Passover
25:53
Catholics, Immigration and Deportation; New Christian Contemplatives