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In events such as the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 and the retaliation from the United States on Iraq and other threatening groups in the Middle East may lead one to the conclusion that religious conflicts in the 21st century cannot be resolved without violence. ... Most experts have been lead to believe that these attacks were motivated by the clash of religious and social beliefs. ... Therefore, the conflict occurred because neither side could communicate effectively either because of language barriers or purely a differing in morals and cultural practices.
Another element that has strengthened religious force is the effect that a country’s economic prosperity has had on conflict resolution. Take, for example, the Israeli-Palestine conflict that exists the Middle East today: many Palestinians living in the area nearly fifty years ago were forced to flee their country because the area was religiously documented to be the Jewish homeland. ... The only conclusion that can be deduced from these conflicts is that due their clash of religious beliefs neither country could find a suitable solution for this dispute. ... Their moral foundation is built on their religion which states that Jerusalem was the homeland for their religious following, whereby justifying their actions in evacuating the opposition.
Approximate Word count = 908 Approximate Pages = 3.6 (250 words per page double spaced)
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