Leonard Swidler

Leonard J. Swidler (born January 6, 1929) is Professor Emeritus at Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where he taught from 1966 - 2022.

At Temple, and as a visiting professor at universities around the world – including Graz, Austria; Tübingen, Germany; Fudan University, Shanghai; and the University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur – he has mentored a generation of U.S. and international scholars in the work of interreligious dialogue. He has a Licentiate in Sacred Theology from the University of Tübingen and received his Ph.D. in History from the University of Wisconsin; he also holds honorary doctorates from St. Norbert’s College and LaSalle University. Dr. Swidler continues to teach in retirement at the University of Sulaimani in Iraqi Kurdistan.

Leonard has published/edited more than 200 articles and 75 books, including:  

Jewish‑Christian‑Muslim Dialogue (1978); Religious Liberty and Human Rights (1986); After the Absolute: The Dialogical Future of Religious Reflection (1990); A Bridge to Buddhist-Christian Dialogue (1990); Muslims in Dialogue: The Evolution of a Dialogue over a Generation (1992); Jesus Was a Feminist (2007).

He has lectured on Catholicism, Ecumenism, Interreligious Dialogue, and Global Ethics all over the world, including Austria, Azerbaijan, Bangladesh, Bosnia, Brazil, Canada, China, Egypt, England, Germany, Hong Kong, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Israel, Italy, Japan, Korea, Lebanon, Malaysia, Morocco, Myanmar, North Macedonia, Pakistan, the Philippines, Poland, Republic of Congo, Romania, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Spain, Sudan, Switzerland, Taiwan, Tunisia, and, of course, the United States.

View Dr. Swidler’s Curriculum Vitae (updated July 2022) HERE.


What is Len Up to Now?

Leonard is currently teaching students from the Political Science Department at the American Corner of the University of Sulaimani. These students are the future diplomats and leaders of Kurdistan.

Dr. Swidler met with Dr. Anwer Jaff and a researcher from the University of Sulaimani.

Having students sit in a circle is Len’s favorite approach. Dialogue is the center of his teaching!

Updated March 2024



The Arlene and Leonard Swidler Chair at Temple University

Professor Leonard Swidler is something of an institution in the College of Liberal Arts' Religion Department and is well-known abroad for furthering interfaith dialogue. And now, Dr. Swidler has made a decision that will ensure the professor, who's been with Temple University since 1966, will remain an institution here long after his teaching tenure is complete.

In June 2020, he made a generous commitment to the college in his will, allowing for the creation of the Arlene and Leonard Swidler Chair for Interreligious Dialogue and Modern Catholic Thought in the Religion Department. This will ensure Dr. Swidler's lifelong dedication to Temple and the College of Liberal Arts will extend into a lasting legacy.

Dr. Swidler says that Temple has had a broad, inter-religious history since it became a state-related university in 1966. It's no coincidence that the university became such right at the same time Dr. Swidler joined the faculty—its becoming a public university was the main reason he came! Once he joined the faculty here, the college began teaching religion "from the inside as well as from the outside," according to Dr. Swidler. The professor says it was an approach no other university in the world attempted before Temple.

Press Release by Temple University

Guest Positions while tenured at Temple University

  • ACUIIS summer school at University of Graz, Austria, 1972, 1973

  • Guest Professor on the Catholic Theology Faculty and the Protestant Theology Faculty of the University of Tübingen, 1972-73

  • Visiting Professor at Saint Michael's College, Winouski, VT. Summer, 1976

  • Exchange Professor on the Catholic Theology Faculty and the Institute for Ecumenical Research of the University of Tübingen, Summer Semester, 1982

  • Exchange Professor on the Catholic Theology Faculty and the Institute for Ecumenical Research of the University of Tübingen, Summer Semester, 1985

  • Guest Professor in the Philosophy Department, Nankai University, Tianjin, People's Republic of China, Summer Semester, 1986

  • Professor at Temple University Japan (Tokyo), Summer School, May–June, 1987

  • Exchange Professor on the Protestant Theology Faculty, Hamburg University, Fall semester, 1989

  • Guest Professor in the Philosophy Department, Fudan University, Shanghai, China, Summer Semester, 1990

  • Professor at Temple University Japan (Tokyo), 1990-91

  • Visiting Fulbright Professor at Centre for Civilisational Dialogue of the University of Malaya, Kualalumpur, Malaysia, summer 2003

  • Visiting Fulbright Professor at Centre for Civilisational Dialogue of the University of Malaysia, Kualalumpur, Malaysia, summer 2004

  • Visiting Professor, East China University, Shanghai, China, June, 2004

  • Visiting Professor, Fudan University, Shanghai, China, June, 2004

  • Visiting Professor, Peoples’ University, Beijing, China, June, 2004

  • Visiting Fulbright Professor at Centre for Catholic Studies, Chung Chi College, [[The Chinese University of Hong Kong, November, 2007

  • Visiting Fulbright Professor at Khazar University, Baku, Azerbaijan, May 1–28, 2011

Honors

  • LL.D. from La Salle University, Philadelphia, October, 1977.

  • LL.D. from St. Norbert College, DePere, WI, October, 2001.

  • Prize for 2002 from the Academic Society for the Research of Religions and Ideologies (SACRI), University of Cluj, Romania.

Len Swidler has been a vital member of the College of Liberal Arts’ faculty for over five decades. I’m delighted that he’ll be making such a generous gift to the college, allowing his name and legacy to live on here to the benefit of future students and faculty members. Creating an endowed professorship will strengthen the Religion department for the long haul.
— Richard Deeg, TU College of Liberal Arts Dean