By Prof. Assoc. Dr. Bledar Kurti
The twenty-first century was supposed to become the age of tolerance. Instead, it is increasingly becoming the age of polarization.
Across continents, societies are witnessing a dangerous normalization of religious hostility. Antisemitism is reaching levels unseen in generations. Islamophobia is becoming more visible in public discourse and political rhetoric. Anti-Christian attacks, particularly against churches and Christian communities, continue to rise in several regions.
These trends are often treated as separate problems. They are not. They are different faces of the same crisis: the collapse of our ability to see the humanity of those who believe differently.
History teaches us an uncomfortable lesson. Hatred never remains confined to one target. Once society accepts prejudice against one religious community, it gradually becomes easier to justify prejudice against another. The victim changes; the mechanism remains the same.
The evidence is alarming. In the United States, the Anti-Defamation League recorded more than 9,300 antisemitic incidents during 2024—the highest number since it began collecting data nearly half a century ago. The organization also reported that antisemitic incidents increased dramatically over the past decade, while attacks connected to tensions surrounding the Israel-Hamas conflict became a significant driver of hostility.
Meanwhile, organizations monitoring anti-Muslim discrimination have documented sharp increases in reports of Islamophobia following the same conflict, with thousands of complaints ranging from harassment to discrimination and violent attacks.
Christian communities are not immune either. Across Europe and parts of Africa and the Middle East, churches have been vandalized, worshippers attacked, and religious symbols desecrated. France alone reported a notable increase in anti-Christian incidents during 2025, prompting heightened security around places of worship.
These numbers represent more than statistics. They represent ordinary people who increasingly feel unsafe simply because of their faith.
Yet the greatest danger lies elsewhere.
Social media has transformed disagreement into identity warfare. Algorithms reward outrage, not understanding. Every international conflict rapidly becomes a domestic religious confrontation. Every tragedy becomes an opportunity to generalize guilt. Every extremist act becomes evidence, in someone’s eyes, that an entire religion is dangerous.
The result is a vicious cycle. Some respond to antisemitism by embracing Islamophobia. Others react to Islamophobia by tolerating antisemitic narratives. Still others dismiss growing hostility toward Christians because it does not fit their preferred political framework.
This selective morality is precisely what allows hatred to grow. The principle should be remarkably simple: if hatred against one religion is unacceptable, hatred against every religion must be unacceptable. Human dignity cannot be selective.
Unfortunately, many political movements have begun treating religious communities not as fellow citizens but as symbols of ideological battles. Jews become representatives of Middle East politics. Muslims become representatives of terrorism. Christians become representatives of colonialism or cultural conservatism. None of these reductions reflects reality.
No individual should carry collective responsibility for crimes committed by others who happen to share the same religion.
This is precisely where the world should pay closer attention to an often-overlooked country on Europe’s southeastern edge. Albania.
International discussions frequently describe Albania through the lenses of a small country in the Balkans or European Union accession. Rarely is it recognized for one of its greatest contributions to modern civilization: a centuries-old culture of religious coexistence.
Albanians belong to different faiths. Muslims, Catholics, Orthodox Christians, Protestants and members of the Bektashi order have lived together for generations not because they erased their religious identities but because they developed a stronger civic identity alongside them.
Religious holidays are celebrated across communities. Families often include members of different faith traditions. Places of worship stand within walking distance of one another. Most importantly, religious identity has never been weaponized for political mobilization.
During the Holocaust, Albania became the only European country with more Jews after the Second World War than before it began. Guided by the moral code of Besa, Albanian families, Muslim and Christian alike, risked their own lives to protect Jewish refugees from Nazi persecution.
That chapter should not be remembered merely as an episode of Albanian history. It should be studied as a model of moral courage.
The lesson is profound. People protected one another not because they shared the same religion, but because they shared the same humanity.
Today’s world desperately needs that philosophy. Of course, Albania is not perfect. Like every democratic society, it faces political divisions, social tensions and the influence of global polarization through digital media. But it still demonstrates something increasingly rare: religious diversity without religious conflict.
That achievement deserves international attention. Governments cannot legislate mutual respect into existence. Technology companies cannot moderate every hateful message. Security services cannot arrest every extremist before violence occurs. Ultimately, the strongest defense against religious hatred is cultural. It begins in schools that teach history honestly rather than selectively. It continues through political leaders who refuse to exploit religious identities for electoral gain. It depends on media that distinguish individuals from entire communities. And it flourishes in societies where neighbors know one another before they judge one another.
The future of democratic civilization will not be determined solely by military alliances or economic growth. It will also depend on whether free societies preserve something more fundamental: the conviction that every human being deserves equal dignity regardless of the way they pray, or whether they pray at all.
If the world continues normalizing antisemitism, Islamophobia or anti-Christian hatred depending on political convenience, polarization will deepen and democracy itself will weaken. But if humanity chooses a different path, one built on equal respect rather than selective outrage, it will discover that peaceful coexistence is not an impossible dream. It already exists.
For generations, it has existed in Albania.
It is time the world learned from it.
© 2026 Argumentum























































