Jason (admin)

 

[The following is a guest-post from Peter Dybing. Peter identifies himself as a human activist who happens to be Pagan rather than a Pagan activist. His activism has included direct action on environmental issues, civil rights issues and freedom of religion. His first activist role was a meeting with the Governor of Colorado concerning school integration in 1969 at eight years of age.]

Recently our community was justifiably proud to see a Pagan Chaplain receiving an award for religious pluralism from the Hindu American Foundation. We have come a long way in gaining acceptance for earth-based traditions.

This event was also an opportunity to view how another minority community organizes its activities in support of gaining religious tolerance and acceptance on a national scale. Hindus number around two million in the United States, roughly twice the number of the Neo Pagan community. In terms of organization, the Hindu community has banded together and created a national voice on Hindu rights and acceptance. This organization has an office in Washington DC that works full time addressing the issues of civil rights, tolerance and religious pluralism.

So here is the question; are we as a community even half as effectively organized to gain or defend rights for Pagans?

It is tempting to provide a long list of organizations and individuals doing great work for Pagan rights in response to this question. Each of these deserves our respect for all they have accomplished.

Instead, lets address if this plethora of activities is keeping us from acting with unanimity? Is our approach analogous to a group of organizations playing Capture the Flag, where there are wins, but only by small groups and not the community as a whole? Does our duplication of effort squander resources and reflect that Paganism still needs to mature into an effective movement?

Addressing these questions requires putting aside both organizational self-interest and ego. There is no threat in engaging in discussion about the effectiveness of our efforts. Creating a process where our community can “keep eyes on the prize” serves the community as a whole.

We have many traditions that rigorously defend their independence in spiritual practice. This is a strength that allows all to have a voice and a personal relationship with the Devine. We should however, examine if this culture has led to the inability to truly unify in supporting goals that serve the entire community.

The Hindu community is a good example, a religious tradition that has many paths (sects), coming together to achieve their common interest. Efforts have been made to form an organization that serves this role in our community. None have achieved widespread and focused support. Each is a player in the metaphorical game of capture the flag.

There are, on the horizon, new models for achieving our goals. One of these is the example of Patrick McCollum, with a proven track record of fighting for the rights of all Pagan’s, Rev. McCollum sets an example for unity of action. While I personally support his efforts, only time will tell if we are ready to express our collective intent and financial support community wide.

Currently, Rev. McCollum and many other Pagan Rights Activists are spending their own funds, sacrificing their home lives and personal financial security in support of our rights. These individuals, who enjoy our spiritual support, deserve our corporeal support in the form of funds and active participation in creating a unified Pagan Rights Organization.

This call to action is not intended to address the efforts of our diverse community of Interfaith Activists. We as a community are well served by having interfaith representatives from different paths. It is in the area of civil rights, legal challenges, lobbying and legislative action where we need to come together as one voice.

If you are involved in guiding a Pagan organization, at any level, this is a call to start a discussion on how to unify our approach to Pagan rights beyond the boundaries of our traditions and established efforts. Avoid the temptation to offer your group as the answer, be open to unique ideas, and work together with other organizations in a unified effort.

One million Pagans, with one voice and collective intent can achieve the goals we have in common.

In Service to the Goddess,
- Peter Dybing

 

Pagan+Politics is always on the lookout for new voices and perspectives that can broaden and enrich the discourse we have running here. I’m pleased to announce three new contributors from across the political spectrum who are part of a new effort to help revitalize this site, and keep  us working towards our mission of modern Pagans civilly discussing the politics of the day. These three are only the beginning, so please stay tuned for more announcements in the near future!

Michael Eric Bérubé

By trade, Michael has been a photographer for over 25 years. He holds a Degree in Marketing Management from the University of So. Maine and even continued to moonlight in photography part time while working a ‘day job’ in Marketing for Corporations (for far too many years) and again full time once he broke free of the Salary Slave mentatlity in 2001.

He is a father of two brilliantly creative teen daughters, he has been a loving husband to their vivacious full time homeschooling (and college student!) mother since 1987. They all live with their three cats in a tidy little recycled cabbage (cabin/cottage) a mile down a dirt road in the wild western hills of Maine on the back end of their heavily wooded 130 acres (called Heronswood.)

Michael is active with the Libertarian party and the broader Self Government movement since 1992, he is a loyal friend, an American Celt and a Panentheist Pagan exploring modern Bardic Druidry as it relates to life in the 21st Century… He is an active Freemason, a proud US Army veteran and very active in local government having served nearly a decade as the Chair of the Board of Appeals and now as a member of the town’s Budget Committee.

Sebastian Page

Sebastian Page is a practicing solitary Wiccan residing in Alberta, Canada. A retired US Navy veteran currently employed by the Government of Alberta, he lives in Edmonton with his wife and two children. Self-described as a conservative libertarian, his areas of interest and studies over the last twenty five years have revolved around politics, religion, philosophy, and psychology.

Ryan Smith

Ryan has been a practitioner of Asatru for the last four years and involved in the Pagan community for the last thirteen. He has a degree in history and works for an Internet startup in San Francisco. In his spare time he organizes the San Francisco Pagan meetup, an open networking group. Ryan’s politics are very progressive but isn’t married to the Democrats or the Republicans thinking both deserve criticism when it is due.

Please give them all a warm welcome, and stay tuned for further announcements!

 

[The following is a guest post by Maelstrom from The Political Pagan. Maelstrom teaches at a small college in New York State. Prior to this, he studied in Iceland and taught at colleges in Japan and Eastern Europe. As a scholar, supporter and participant in modern-day Paganism, by which he mean forms of religion derived from native European religions, Maelstrom is interested to see what can come from applying Pagan perspectives to political issues, and political perspectives to our Paganism.]

Hello all. As part of a research project on the political views of Norse Pagans (=Heathens, Asatru members, Asatruar) in the USA. I have devised a poll on the topic for members of this Pagan community. However, after thinking more, I realized it would be useful to also ask members of non-Asatru, non-Norse Pagan groups, about their political perspectives. My hope is to be able to contrast the political profile of Asatru members with other Pagans. At this stage, I am only seeking responses from Pagans in the USA, but this could extend to other countries in the future. The survey is rather crude, only ten questions, but it is designed to at least highlight some broad-brush differences between right-wing and left-wing, conservative and liberal positions. I encourage you to participate either in the Asatru poll, if you are involved with Norse Paganism, or the non-Asatru poll, if you are Wiccan, Goddess-worshipping, Celtic, Hellenic, or other types of Pagan.

Note: these surveys are for USA citizens and residents only. I hope to develop versions for other countries in future, but at this point, USA only.

All responses are anonymous. Neither I nor anyone else will know who you are if you answer this survey. No such information is collected. The system is however designed to allow each person to respond to the survey only one time. You can change your answers up to the point where you exit, but once you do exit the survey, you cannot go back and change answers.

Here is the link for the Asatru survey:
Click here to take survey

Here is the link for the non-Asatru survey:
Click here to take survey

I will discuss results at a future date.

 

[The following is a guest-post from Kathy Nance. Kathy is a freelance writer, green entrepreneur and lifelong Cardinals Baseball fan from St. Louis, Missouri. She also is the first Pagan to write for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch's Civil Religion blog.]

Oh, Albert.

Say it isn’t so.

Say it was just a horrible mass hallucination, that you didn’t really accept an award from GLENN BECK and share the stage with SARAH PALIN at that rally dishonoring the memory of Dr. Martin Luther King Saturday, August 28.

Because if it really was you—then Cardinals Baseball, the one thing that united St. Louisans, is now tainted for me.

St. Louis is a baseball town. Football teams have come and gone with just a change of fan jerseys. We’ve yawned when professional basketball foundered, barely rallied to keep professional hockey, and hardly noticed the demise of two soccer leagues. Or maybe three.

But Cardinals baseball is sacred. We forgave Mark McGwire the steroid allegations, extended dispensation to Tony LaRussa for being a California vegetarian, gave alms to the millionaire owners for a new stadium. But most of all, we have worshipped Albert of Pujols, the second coming of Stan “The Man” Musial. St. Albert. El Hombre.

I’ve admired him for his charity work among people with Down Syndrome. I respect that he points upwards after every home run, thanking his own God in his own way. He certainly deserves awards and recognition for leading an exemplary life off the field.

But did he have to accept it from Glenn Beck and his gang of racist theocrats?

I have to wonder whether Albert thought about how that might read to his non-white, non-Christian fans. Michael Jordan famously observed that Republicans buy shoes, too. Well, African-Americans, Hispanics, Jews, Muslims, and Pagans all buy baseball tickets, Albert. But I don’t think any of us would have been welcome at Glenn Beck’s rally. Or wanted to be. Shudder.

Think about this, Albert. If you weren’t El Hombre—if you were just a regular hombre scratching for work, how welcome would you have been at that rally? Glenn Beck, supporter of Arizona’s anti-immigration laws would have been among the first wanting you booted back where you came from. And he wouldn’t mean St. Louis.

As for me, well, if I’d known about the rally Saturday at the Stan Musial statue protesting your appearance at the BeckFest, Albert, I would have been there. Instead, I was at the International Festival at Tower Grove Park. Food, music, dances honoring people and religions from every inhabited continent. It was beautiful.

Too bad you missed it. It was St. Louis at its most diverse and its most unified, right down to the Cardinals baseball hats.

 

[The following is a guest-post from Peter Dybing. Peter identifies himself as a human activist who happens to be Pagan rather than a Pagan activist. His activism has included direct action on environmental issues, civil rights issues and freedom of religion. His first activist role was a meeting with the Governor of Colorado concerning school integration in 1969 at eight years of age.]

Islamophobia: A Threat to the Pagan Community

From rural Wisconsin to lower Manhattan Americans are mobilizing in opposition to the location of Islamic places of worship in their communities. With images of September 11th etched in it’s collective subconscious, our nation is once again traversing the slippery slope that leads to religious persecution, fear and outright bigotry.

Islam has become the convenient target of defamation, hate, suspicion and direct verbal attacks.  Americans in ever growing numbers freely tell anti Islamic jokes in public places.  If these attacks were aimed at another faith, minority or ethnic group there would surly be a substantial backlash.

So why should the Neo Pagan community become involved in defending the rights of a belief system that holds views so foreign to our earth based community?

Islam, an incredibly diverse group of faiths, is faced with being branded as intolerant and violent due to the actions of radical fringe groups.  We in the Pagan community have experienced attempts to paint us all with the same brush when individuals who claim to be Pagan commit violent acts.  Recent events in New Mexico and Australia make this clear.

To stand by and allow these forms of attack encourages those who believe that our country should not be tolerant of a diversity of beliefs.  If we do not stand in support of inclusion and respect we risk our own fight for Pagan rights through our lack of action.

There are many well-meaning people who have expressed concern with the placement of the Mosque in New York City. There are others, however, who have taken this opportunity to spread fear, hate, and bigotry.  They must be confronted

All threats to religious rights and tolerance are a threat to our community, our nation and our ability to openly worship the divine as we please.

It is not easy to come to the defense of a belief system so different than ours. Nor was it easy for Christian, Jewish and Islamic leaders to support the inclusion of Pagans in the interfaith movement. Yet, these leaders did it because it was the right thing to do. Now comes our opportunity to stand for what we believe.

Pagan Brothers and Sisters, join me in communicating to the Islamic community our support for their right to worship openly, when they want to and where they want to.  Confront those who oppose tolerance, Make our collective intent known.

In Service to the Goddess,
- Peter Dybing

I’d like to thank Peter for his guest post. For more debate and discussion concerning the Park51 community center and mosque in New York City, and Pagan reactions to that controversy, please see today’s post at The Wild Hunt. Also, I know this is a contentious issue, but please remember our comment policy, and keep discussions civil.

 

Greetings Pagan+Politics readers! Allow me to introduce the second of two new voices (the first being Wooly) being added to our ever-growing lineup. Alison Shaffer, a Pagan pacifist and anarchist, represents a point of view shared by several individuals and groups within the Pagan community, and I’m happy to see her be a part of this endeavor.

Here’s Ali’s bio:

Alison Shaffer began her academic study of Paganism in college and her spiritual practice of Druidry soon after. She has been a vocal pacifist since at least the age of twelve, and she was born an anarchist, like everyone else. Growing up a laid-back liberal Catholic, her deep commitment to poetry and peace, both rooted firmly in her love of the natural world, led her to explore the mystic traditions of the world religions, including Sufism, Buddhism and Taoism, before eventually landing her squarely in the round hole of Academia, where she graduated valedictorian of her class, humbly accepted her degree, and ran for it. She now lives a life of voluntary poverty, trimmed with green, in the lovely, half-empty city of Pittsburgh. She devotes much of her time to cultivating a spiritual life founded on peace-making, poetry, creativity and active, embodied engagement with the inner and outer landscapes of wildness, wilderness and nature (she writes about this work regularly on her blog, Meadowsweet & Myrrh). She has continued to study pacifism as both a political philosophy and a spiritual perspective, and has watched with as much surprise as anyone else as her notions of anarchism slowly blossom in the same way games emerge among children on the playground, full of joy and running, with nobody keeping score.

Her first post should be appearing within the next couple days, so please give her a warm welcome!

PS – For those of you wondering, founding team-member Hrafnkell Haraldsson is currently on the mend after a complicated surgery, and we hope to see him posting again at Pagan+Politics soon!

Cheers,

Jason Pitzl-Waters
Projects Coordinator
The Pagan Newswire Collective

 

Greetings Pagan+Politics readers! In an attempt to keep this site vital, and represent as many political points of view as possible within the larger Pagan community, we’ll be adding two new voices to our lineup this week. The first is a regular and intelligent commenter at this site, who goes by the name of Wooly.

Here’s Wooly’s bio:

“I’m an eclectic witch who discovered magic through books in the early 70s and am currently part of a small Coven in Texas. In the past, I was involved with the Council of Magickal Arts as well as several more transitory groups and used to contribute articles to WitchVox and CMA Accord but today stay firmly in the broom closet and so will write from that perspective. Politically I’m proud to have never registered with either party. Perhaps the closest I come to mapping to a single party would be Libertarian but even there I have differences. Professionally I’m a computer geek with a technical degree. My travels have taken me around North America and Western Europe and I try to stay current from many perspectives instead of from just a US-centric viewpoint. I welcome informed debate (in the classical sense of the term) but deplore the current state of political discourse that seems to consist of yelling unsupported sounds bites at your opponents without listening in return.”

His first post should be appearing either later today, or tomorrow, so please give him a warm welcome!

Stay tuned later this week for the unveiling of our second new contributor/blogger!

Cheers,

Jason Pitzl-Waters
Projects Coordinator
The Pagan Newswire Collective

 

I’ve noticed some complaints lately that Pagan+Politics is overly conservative, or that we have an editorial bias towards right-wing views, so I wanted to make a quick note about editorial balance at this project, and our future plans.

First, the blog was launched with equal “teams” from the right, left, and center, in hopes that we would present a balanced overview of politics from a Pagan perspective. Each author is encouraged to post at least once per week, though they can post more often as they are willing and able to. I wanted to avoid the hard ideological boundaries of the political blogosphere, encourage civil discussion, and increase understanding between Pagans from different political backgrounds. So far, on the whole, I think we are succeeding in having that civil discussion, and moving things in a healthy direction.

I understand that the political landscape has become increasingly polarized, and right now folks from various camps are feeling pretty angry, but I hope we can avoid the worst impulses in such times and continue to assume the best intentions of all the writers and participants here.

As to the issue of balance, one of our liberal team-members, Hrafnkell, has been dealing with some personal matters that have made it hard for him to blog regularly. Leaving only the joint team of Rita and Eric to express a view from the Democratic/liberal camp. Since they aren’t available to blog very often, this may have falsely given the impression that we are overbalanced with conservative or right-leaning views. I assure you this isn’t the case, and as project manager I’ll be having a discussion with our current team on how to best address this.

Finally, we have always planned to expand the number of voices that post to this blog, so if you are interested in writing for Pagan+Politics, no matter what your political views, please drop me a line.

 

Hello, my name is Jason Pitzl-Waters, co-founder and Projects Coordinator for the Pagan Newswire Collective. The PNC’s purpose is to share and promote primary-source reporting from within our interconnected communities. Building off the successful “Pagans at the Parliament” site, which raised the profile of Pagan involvement at the Parliament of the World’s Religions, and helped break important stories as they happened, the PNC has decided to pursue more targeted single-topic blog projects. The first will be an ongoing group-blog entitled Pagan+Politics.

This group blog is about modern American Pagans, from across the ideological and theological spectrum, commenting on the politics of the day. Giving insight and opinion, and sharing how their religious faith shapes their political views.

Why this project? Because the last few years have shown us that contemporary Paganism, whether we like it or not, is a part of today’s political discussion and process. We have two openly Pagan elected officials currently serving in the United States of America, Democrat Jessica Orsini, Alderwoman, 3rd Ward, City of Centralia, Missouri, and Republican Dan Halloran, New York City Councilman for District 19. There were two openly Pagan delegates at the 2008 Democratic National Convention that chose Barack Obama to be the Democratic Party’s candidate, military widow Roberta Stewart successfully fought the VA, under the Bush Administration, to win the right for Wiccan soldiers to place a Pentacle on their graves, and recently, Obama Administration officials met with Pagan chaplain Patrick McCollum to talk about discrimination towards minority faiths in our country.

It is fair to say that modern Paganism, as a movement of interconnected yet individual faith communities, is long overdue in having a more active and ongoing say in the issues and policies that affect our lives. Pagan+Politics hopes to become an important part of our faith communities having that say.

In addition to discussing politics, this blog is also about eradicating myths. The myth that we are politically homogeneous, the myth that adherents to our faiths aren’t invested in the political process, and the myth that we are incapable of acknowledging and embracing our true diversity. This blog will feature heated discussions and broach divisive issues, but I hope it will also build bridges within our communities, and provide a human face to those outside our movement.

I’m extremely proud to introduce the (lucky) seven initial blog authors, Laura Allen, a political moderate, and student at Cherry Hill Seminary, Duane Clemons, a former Republican-turned-independent who delivers mail in Kansas, Hrafnkell Haraldsson, a progressive Heathen and founder of the Mos Maiorum Foundation, Daniel Allen Maine, a Witch and long-time conservative currently serving in the U.S. Army, Rita Moran, chairperson of the Kennebec County (Maine) Democratic Committee, who served as an openly Pagan at-large national delegate for Obama at the Democrat National Convention in Denver, Eric Robbins, who is partnering with Rita Moran on this project, and who organized of Maine’s first chapter of Drinking Liberally, and Cara Schulz, a conservative with a rich background in broadcast journalism who was recently elected Tamias (Treasurer) for Hellenion.

As we progress, I envision that we’ll expand to include even more political and religious diversity at Pagan+Politics, and also undertake special coverage of political events that resonate within the wider Pagan community (I’m also interested in initiating projects for Pagan political commentary in other countries, but that’s for another time). But for now, please warmly welcome them as they start this exciting new endeavor. I hope you’ll add this site to your blogroll, subscribe to the RSS feed, follow it on Twitter, and become a fan at Facebook. I also hope you’ll (respectfully) engage them in the comments at the site as they start to post on Friday. Each blogger is committed to making at least one post per week, so there will be plenty to digest and interact with.

 

Blog launching this Friday. Stay tuned!

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