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*~* Tolerance for all... *~* Hey,Hey,Paula

  Author:  53961  Category:(News) Created:(10/10/2003 11:34:00 AM)
This post has been Viewed (788 times)

Oct. 7, 2003

Some Muslims wear sacred clothing.

So do some Jews. The same for Native Americans and some Hindus and others.

Bits of cloth or string that are physical reminders of God and his bond with man. Sacred things, really. Prayer shawls or beads, head coverings or aprons, medicine bags. Things that are special to people, honorable and good things.

Things that should be respected.

One would not, for example, rip the yarmulke from a Jewish man’s head and mockingly fling it like a Frisbee. Nor would you wear a yarmulke as a spoof or joke. Certainly not as an attack on Judaism. Not as a mockery of Jews and their faith.

Yet something like that happened this weekend.

In front of thousands of people in one of America’s great cities. An act of religious desecration, bigotry and discrimination.

And the perpetrators boast of it to the press.

It was in Salt Lake City. And it was against Mormons.

And somehow that makes it acceptable.

Here’s what happened.

Over the weekend, Mormons gathered for what they call “general conference.” It is a twice-a-year meeting that draws tens of thousands to Salt Lake City and is broadcast around the world to an audience in the low millions. It is a worship service. It is sacred and special to them.

And each year it is protested.

So-called Christian evangelists stand on the sidewalk outside the Mormon meetings and shout rude condemnations of the religion to the thousands who pass in and out. It is an odd spectacle, unmatched in American society. To think that crude protesters would stand outside a mosque or synagogue, or a cathedral or church, and harass worshippers and denounce a religion is just beyond the pale.

It is an act of indefensible religious bigotry.

And yet it happens, and is often applauded and boasted of.

This column started with a mention of sacred clothing. Well, Mormons have sacred clothing, too. Like a variety of religious garments, it is worn against the skin. It is a type of underclothing. They don’t talk about it. They don’t show it to people. They keep it sacred. Like virtually all religious clothing, it is a specific reminder of promises made to God. Like virtually all religious clothing, it is precious and significant to the people who wear it.

Well, Sunday the evangelists had some.

Maybe six guys, Baptist ministers, mocking the Mormons as they came out of a meeting. Shouting rude things to people coming out of church.

And they had these sacred garments.

And one supposed minister of the gospel was wiping his backside with them, laughingly treating them like toilet paper as thousands who held them sacred walked by.

Can you see that being done to a prayer shawl in front of a synagogue, or a prayer rug in front of a mosque?

Wouldn’t that sacrilege be publicly denounced by all decent people?

He also draped them around his neck, and pretended over and over to sneeze into them. And loudly blow his nose into them. While families and children walked past.

Stop for a moment.

Lay aside what you do or don’t think about Mormons. But was that right? More to the point, was that Christian? Is that what Jesus would do? Is that what any decent person of any faith would do?

Absolutely not. It is wrong, bigoted and un-American. No matter who it’s against.

It was an affront. It smelled like the bigotry of the Klan and the Third Reich. And yet the ministers boasted of it to reporters and posed for pictures and no one in the Utah or American religious, media or civil rights communities has condemned it.

And, oddly, two worshippers were taken away in handcuffs.

One man, dressed in his church clothes, walked past in the crowd, saw the insults and desecrations, and grabbed the piece of clothing. To protect it. He was charged with robbery and taken to jail.

Half an hour later another worshipper similarly grabbed a molested garment and attempted to take it away. He was unsuccessful and waiting police stepped in to take him into custody.

And that’s the world we live in.

You are harangued for your beliefs and arrested for defending them.

And the bigotry of our society is illustrated by how selectively we practice tolerance.

- by Bob Lonsberry © 2003

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Replies:      
Date: 10/10/2003 11:51:00 AM  From Authorid: 62310    I can't believe people would do something like that. I've heard of it happeneing before but I still just can't belive anyone would be so cruel and so disrespectful. It makes me sick to my stomach. Princess Rhiannon  
Date: 10/10/2003 11:53:00 AM  From Authorid: 62365    Wow! That's horrible of what happened. I have to admit that I don't know where I stand on religion. I was raised Catholic, but former boyfriends were of different religion (Protestant, Christian & Menonite)...and so, I would go with them to their church. I have seen a lot of bigotry with all religions, a lot of hypocrisy and famous people of religion being convicted of crimes. The world we live in is crazy! You just don't know who to believe and what to believe. I don't go to church anymore, but I do keep my faith in my fashion. I think no matter what you believe in, it's YOUR choice and people need to respect that. There is really no solution to these kinds of problems. I wish there were, but sadly to say...no one ever wins and chaos just happens everywhere. -Ana
Date: 10/10/2003 12:20:00 PM  From Authorid: 59418    omg, that really is disgusting! i can't believe how the minds of some people work...it's sickening.  
Date: 10/10/2003 12:25:00 PM  ( From Author ) From Authorid: 53961    Thank you for your comments. It is heartbreaking...  
Date: 10/10/2003 12:48:00 PM  From Authorid: 53689    This is indeed heartbreaking. It's disgusting. It makes you wonder if we will ever come to a point in which the citizens of this country can live there lives, love who they choose, practice the religion they choose without having to endure such hate as this. I was raised as a Christian, and I was thought to treat ALL with respect.  
Date: 10/10/2003 12:48:00 PM  From Authorid: 53689    taught, not thought...blah  
Date: 10/10/2003 1:13:00 PM  From Authorid: 62367    This is despicable. Probably the worst thing about an incident like this is that the Baptist ministers would go home congratulating themselves on what wonderful Christians they are. They would probably get in the pulpit next Sunday and preach about it. They are not fit to lead any congregation. They surely do not set a Christ-like example. Grrrrrrr   
Date: 10/10/2003 1:19:00 PM  From Authorid: 1799    "I can't believe people would do something like that".... I can.. people r cruel.. i just hope my grandma didn't hear of this.. she is mormon, and already has enough heartache from me and my brother not staying with the religion... i doubt she'd handle this very well.. just proves what i was trying to figure out on my post last night...*shakes head*  
Date: 10/10/2003 2:20:00 PM  ( From Author ) From Authorid: 53961    We have to remind ourselves also that it is not all the people of these denominations, only a few are exhibiting this behavior. There are really good people are there of these faiths that do not support this behavior.  
Date: 10/10/2003 4:00:00 PM  From Authorid: 62289    that is demonic and evil!  
Date: 10/10/2003 4:19:00 PM  From Authorid: 45948    This was a horrible article to read. I personally am not a very religious person but I would NEVER redicule another for their beliefs. That is just terrible the way some people act!!!  
Date: 10/10/2003 4:49:00 PM  From Authorid: 13119    why don't they post these bigoted back-biting cretins pictures? Show their faces and their childish, malicious acts for what they are. They should be publishing their names and forwarding any mail they receive in response to the editorial.  
Date: 10/10/2003 9:49:00 PM  From Authorid: 48525    No one wants THEIR religion mocked and bashed, but many see nothing wrong with doing it to other faiths...all because "their faith" is THE faith. If churches, of all places, cannot (or will not, in some cases)teach and instill tolerance and the whole "love thy neighbor" gig, we are in a sorry, sorry state.  
Date: 10/11/2003 12:18:00 AM  ( From Author ) From Authorid: 53961    I read that one of the men arrested had no funds to bail out and various people came forth to help him.  
Date: 10/11/2003 7:24:00 AM  From Authorid: 36967    Tolerance, if you are not careful, you could go to far ,and that will do more harm than good. A fire is good when it is in it's fire place. You can warm up a home, cook, do laundry, light up the place. These are how a fire can be good when it is in it's place. If fire gets out of it's place, it can destroy, harm and even kill. Well Tolerance is like a fire in many ways.  
Date: 10/11/2003 11:06:00 AM  ( From Author ) From Authorid: 53961    So true.  

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