I'm a member of my local community council, and we're trying to organize a series of public interfaith dialogue events following some recent tensions in our diverse neighborhood, aiming to foster understanding rather than debate between different religious and secular groups. While the intention is widely supported, we're struggling with the practical structure; we want to avoid superficial presentations and create a space for genuine, respectful conversation about shared values and different practices, but we're concerned about inadvertently causing offense or having discussions dominated by a few vocal individuals. For organizers who have run successful, sustained dialogue programs, what formats and ground rules have you found most effective for encouraging open participation and deep listening? How do you select topics or questions that are meaningful but not divisive, and what role should facilitators play in guiding the conversation?
That’s a meaningful goal. A simple, repeatable format can work: 60–90 minutes with a warm welcome and clear ground rules, three rounds of small-group discussion (15–20 minutes each) with a different mix of participants, then a brief plenary share and next steps.
Two formats that scale well: a listening circle (everyone shares in turn with a talking piece) to foster respect and equal airtime, and a fishbowl (a small inner circle discusses while the rest observes, then rotates). Pair those with a World Café style for rotating conversations on different prompts. Ground rules include speaking from personal experience, avoiding proselytizing, and keeping confidences.
Ground rules matter as much as the topics. I’d suggest a simple, posted charter: 1) listen before responding, 2) use 'I' statements, 3) no interrupting, 4) recognize one another’s right to pass, 5) avoid stereotypes and 'us vs them' framing, 6) parking lot for off-topic or sensitive issues, 7) voluntary opt-out to respect energy levels. A facilitator should model these, keep time, and gently redirect if someone dominates. Consider co-facilitators from different faith or community backgrounds to model inclusion.
Topic selection strategy: start with shared values (health, safety, family, service), then invite guests to share personal practices or rituals that connect to those values. Use neutral prompts: 'What everyday practice helps you care for your neighbors?' 'When have you seen people from different backgrounds work well together?' Avoid hot-button debates; keep a 'no wrong answer' rule. Pre-watch or pre-read some materials, but allow space for personal storytelling.
Logistics and risk: pick accessible venues, offer interpretation or translation if needed, provide child care or quiet spaces, and ensure the dialogue is opt-in and not streamed publicly without consent. Have a contact person and a post-event sheet to gather feedback and plan future sessions.