When people argue about belief, little moves. When people cook meals, visit hospital wards, or forgive a neighbour, a city moves. This book is a guide to that movement. It shows how the great traditions converge on workable virtues: compassion, humility, and service. With brisk stories and simple practices, it turns comparative religion into a map for action, translating shared ethics into habits anyone can use. You will learn to move from soft sentiment to sturdy solidarity, to carry convictions without hard edges, and to make practical spirituality your daily craft. Whether you pray, doubt, or do both before breakfast, the path scales: from a two-minute check-in to a monthly review; from caring for one person to shaping a team culture. Along the way, it reframes work as vocation, attention as prayer, and neighbourhoods as classrooms for moral philosophy lived out. For seekers, practitioners, and leaders who want interfaith harmony without flattening difference, this is a field manual for unity in diversity. Expect concrete tools, humane stories, and a portable rule of life that anchors compassion in faith, grows humility and service, and builds spiritual common ground and everyday sacred practice where it matters most.
The Universal Path
SKU: 9789375369950
$23.99 Regular Price
$18.94Sale Price
- Claudine Al-Nasir writes about the meeting places of faith, ethics, and everyday life. Over many years she has convened conversations between neighbours, clergy, and community organisers, helping groups move from slogans to shared work. Her essays and talks focus on character as a public good and the small habits that make compassion dependable. A quiet fascination with how traditions travel through families shapes her approach; at home, shelves mix classical poetry with well-thumbed prayer books. Rooted in the past yet attentive to the present, she studies how rituals, stories, and service form people who can hold their convictions without hardening their hearts. This book continues that work with a simple aim: to make the universal path visible and usable on ordinary days.


















