Contents Page,
Vol. 2, No. 2
Quick Links
to other articles
in this issue:
A Different Spiritual Politics
Preaching the Word in Littleton
On the Beat: In Lagos, Religions Above the Fold
Kosovo: A Confusion of Tongues
The Diallo Killings: Sharpton Ecumenistes
Methodisms Time of Trials
Spiritual Politicking and the IRS
Correspondence: Was the Church Arson Story Legit? |
Something
Wiccan This Way Comes
by Mark SilkIt was one of those slow-motion stories that begin with an
enterprising reporter in the provinces. On May 11, the Austin American-Statesman
published religion reporter Kim Sue Lia Perkess take-out on the three-year-old
practice of Wicca at Fort Hood, the huge Army base in Killeen, Texas. The main story took
readers to the celebration of this years vernal equinox by 40 female and male
witches (mostly active-duty soldiers); explained the nature of Wicca ("a
reconstruction of nature worship from tribal Europe and other parts of the world");
and traced its growth in America and its acceptance as a religion by the U.S. military.
Perkes reported that Army brass were touchy about discussing their accommodation of
neo-paganism, and that at Fort Hood it had elicited an ongoing protest from members of a
local conservative Baptist church. There were also sidebars on Wiccan beliefs and on how
the stereotype of witches arose in early modern Europe.
Sensationalistic the story wasnt. Intriguing it was.
At first, the outside world took little notice. In Washington, correspondents for the Times
of London and the London Daily Telegraph knocked out articles on the U.S.
Armys witches, while in New York, Bill OReilly (on Fox Newss "The
OReilly Factor") called the Armys recognition of "white
witchcraft" as a religion "the most ridiculous item of the day," quipping
that there was no truth to the rumor that the Army was developing a "Bradley fighting
broomstick."
Then, on May 18, Rep. Bob Barr of Georgia and Clinton impeachment fame announced that
he had written letters to the Secretary of the Army and Fort Hoods commander
demanding that the Army cease sanctioning Wiccan practices. The scene shifted to Atlanta,
where the Journal and Constitution reported on protests by the local Wiccan
community. At a May 29 "town meeting" filled largely with supportive
constituents, Barr declared that elected leaders should decide which religions could be
practiced in the military. To that end, he attempted unsuccessfully to amend the Defense
appropriations bill to ban the practice of witchcraft on Army bases.
In letter, press release, column, and interview, Barr, a former U.S. Attorney,
distinguished between civilian and military religious rights. Wicca and other
unconventional religious practices would, he said, undermine military effectiveness:
"[W]ill armored divisions be forced to travel with sacrificial animals for Satanic
rituals? Will Rastifarians [sic] demand the inclusion of ritualistic marijuana cigarettes
in the rations?" But the prospect of such horribles seemed to bother him less than
the symbolism of a non-Judeo-Christian military. "The fact of the matter isand
witches wont like thisour country was founded on a basic belief in God,"
he told the Journal and Constitutions Gayle White. (Barrs personal
religious proclivities made the news in June, when the New York Times reported that
he and his wife had left the 5,000-member First United Methodist Church of Marietta with
450 other families because of what they regarded as an insufficiently strong stand against
gay marriage by Georgias Methodist bishops.)
The sagas next chapterpossibly occasioned by Hanna Rosins report on
the Fort Hood Wiccans in the June 8 Washington Postbegan with a June 9
announcement by conservative activist Paul Weyrich that his Free Congress Foundation and
12 other conservative groups were calling for Christians to stop joining or re-enlisting
in the Army until it prohibited witchcraft rituals on posts. But Perkes, still keeping her
beat on the story, quickly elicited retractions from two of the alleged boycotts
most prominent members, the Christian Coalition and the American Freedom Institute.
"This brings back the specter of the Salem witch trials," Marc Levin, the
Institutes vice president, told her. "In addition to being wrongheaded,
conservative calls for a boycott of the military are politically suicidal. Support for the
military is a bedrock conservative principle." A spokesman for the American Family
Association said that while the organization supported the effort to ban Wicca, it was
"totally blindsided" by the boycott callwhich seemed largely to reflect
Weyrichs own post-impeachment view that religious conservatives should separate
themselves from corrupted American institutions.
"What is it going to take, you believers in God?" he cried in an op-ed piece
distributed by Knight-Ridder and published in Austin, Fort Worth, Omaha, and Salt Lake.
"Do we just accept what is happening as normal? Or do we believers finally say
weve had it? We are not going to let pagans claim an equal footing with God.
Institutions that go that route are institutions that will just have to function without
young people."
The free exercise of religion is in fact a more limited right in the armed forces than
in civilian society. Most recently, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 1986 that a Jewish
officer did not have the right to wear a yarmulke while on duty. But restricting specific
practicesFort Hood refuses to permit naked Wiccan rituals, for exampleis a far
cry from drawing the kind of invidious distinctions among religions that Barr and Weyrich
proposed.
In Katcoff v. Marsh (1985), the Second Circuit Court of Appeals concluded that the
governments practice of hiring military chaplains did not violate the First
Amendments ban on religious establishments because of the need to support military
personnel in the free exercise of their religion. The court indicated that the
militarys religious program should be "neutral," should limit competition
among religious groups, and should leave the practice of religion solely to the individual
soldier, "who is free to worship or not as he chooses, without fear of any discipline
or stigma."
Under the circumstances, spokesmen for the military thus insisted at every point that
they were under an obligation to accommodate whatever religious services their personnel
desired, consistent (as the chief chaplain at Fort Hood told National Public Radio)
"with maintaining good order and discipline." As Louisiana State University
history professor Anne Loveland points out in American Evangelicals and the U.S.
Military, 1942-1993, it was only a generation ago that evangelical Protestant
organizations battled with the military to assure the free-exercise rights of evangelical
military personnel. For that reason alone it is not surprising that older and more
experienced conservative evangelical Protestant bodies such as the Southern Baptist
Convention and the National Association of Evangelicals did not join the anti-Wiccan
crusade.
Most politicians, too, declined to tread where Barr rushed inbut there were
exceptions. Ninety-six-year-old South Carolina senator Strom Thurmond, responding to an
alert from President Bob Jones III of Bob Jones University, summoned Pentagon officials to
his office June 16 to lodge a protest, Charleston Post and Courier Washington
correspondent Steve Piacente reported. In a follow-up letter to Undersecretary of Defense
Rudy de Leon, Thurmond threatened to introduce legislation to halt a situation he believed
would be "devastating to the future of the military."
Meanwhile, presumptive Republican presidential nominee Gov. George W. Bush of Texas,
who presumably had followed the story from the beginning in his hometown paper, told
ABCs Good Morning America June 24, "I dont think witchcraft is a
religion and I wish the military would take another look at this and decide against
it."
Within two months, Wicca in the military had achieved the status of a full-fledged
minor national news item. Those in the opinion business in particular had had a field day,
in a shooting-fish-in-a-barrel sort of way.
First out of the blocks was Tom Teepen, the Atlanta-based national correspondent of Cox
Newspapers and a past master at baiting the religious right. Not only was Teepen the first
of many opinion writers to observe that Barrs anti-Clinton witch-hunt had given way
to a hunt for real witches but he got off the best crack, expressing the hope that a good
witch "might get close enough to Barr one day to kiss him and turn him into a
prince."
Among a flock of frisky editorials, the friskiest was the Philadephia Daily Newss:
"Witches in the Army? Wouldnt they be more comfortable in the Air
Force?
Gentlemen, start your bonfires
.Of course, Wiccans are entitled to
practice their religion, even if they cook eye of newt (not necessarily Gingrich) over
bubbling cauldronsjust as that pesky Constitution allows Bob Barr to display his
awesome ignorance yet again." Conservative columnists and editorial pages by and
large kept their own counsel, although the Indianapolis Star soberly conceded,
"The Army would seem to have the better part of the argument."
If professional opinion was overwhelmingly on the side of the Armys defense of
religious freedom, so was public opinion, as far as can be told. Letters to the editor
showed virtually no support for Barr and Weyrich. When the Atlanta Journal and
Constitution asked in its weekly "ethics question" whether Wiccans in the
military should have the same right to worship on military installations as adherents of
other faiths, all but one of the 40 e-mailers who replied (twice the usual response)
answered in the affirmative. "I have voted for Bob Barr in the past, and I support
him in his defense of the Constitution and the rule of law," wrote Jennifer Young of
Carroll County. "However, I believe his statement that Wiccan beliefs are not
protected by the first amendment is an egregious blunder on his part. A defender of civil
liberties such as Mr. Barr should know that his endeavor is a violation of personal
liberties."
Responding to the Weyrich column in the Salt Lake Tribune, Jack Cook of Salt
Lake wrote, "My Mormon brothers and sisters, before you brush this off, the other
four major Christian religions in this country (Protestants, Catholics, Baptists,
Evangelicals) already refuse to call you Christians and recognize your sacraments. Can you
be sure youre not on the hit list too? How long until they call you heretics? How
long until the Inquisitor comes for you?"
For their part, the organized Wiccans did what Americans of all persuasions do when
they want to take their case to the nation: They held a rally in Washingtonin this
case a Full Moon Circle at the Jefferson Memorial June 28. Perhaps because the 7:00 PM
event was too late for normal deadlines, the event drew scarcely any media attention
beyond a report by Paul Strand of the Christian Broadcasting Network that aired June 30 on
Pat Robertsons 700 Club. Strand showed viewers the two sites of the debate,
interviewing both John Machate, coordinator of the Military Pagan Network ("The
Constitution doesnt say only Christianity is valid. If you start taking away one
religion, youre going to start picking at the other religions.") and Andrea
Sheldon of the Traditional Values Coalition ("This is very dangerous to the
military.").
After the story concluded, Robertson, as is his wont, delivered his own assessment:
"Im not worried about a little coven of witches running around
. Rather
than suppress us all, we might give them their freedom."
To which Machate, in a prepared statement, replied: "Religious tolerance is the
price of religious freedom for all. We were pleased that the Christian Broadcasting
Network attended our press event. Their story was fair and balanced. We thank Reverend
Robertson for his support of religious freedom." |