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
Pope Francis’ Family Document; Stemming Chicago Gun Violence; Church Ushers
25:53
Candidates Reach Out to Jewish Voters; Supreme Court Contraceptive Mandate; Easter Flowers
25:52
Religion in Cuba; India’s Artificial Limb Enterprise; Holy Week
25:46
Will Pope Francis be open to reform; and the Ismaili spiritual leader wants to end poverty
25:50
Healing Moral Wounds of War; Rancher Nuns; Baha'i 19-Day Fast
25:52
U.S. Supreme Court Abortion Case; Son of Saul; Moral Issues in Europe’s Migrant Crisis
25:52
Pope at the Border; Death of Justice Antonin Scalia; Secular Seminarians
25:52
Muslims of Hamtramck, Michigan; Wendell Berry Farming Center
25:53
Ultra-Orthodox Yeshiva Controversy; America's Original Sin; The Boxer
25:52
Social Media and Grieving; India Beef Ban; World Hijab Day
25:50
Doctors and End-of-Life Discussions; Sweet Honey in the Rock; Istanbul’s Monuments
25:51
Faith & Gun Violence; Death with Dignity; Faith Groups and Corporate Social Responsibility