All posts by Annette Marie Hyder

 

Is there a religious test in politics?

Responses from our contributors and readers.

We asked contributors and readers to answer this question, which refers to the U.S. Constitution ban on a “religious test” to hold public office in America. The question could be answered as narrowly focused or as generally as desired, touching on the interplay between religion and politics in American society — what’s good and what’s bad about it.

Here are their responses. Join in and add your comments and opinions. What do you think?

 

Larry Jaffe , writer and Poet Laureate for Youth for Human Rights
(Los Angeles, California)

From the United States Constitution, Article VI, section 3:

“The Senators and Representatives before mentioned, and the members of the several state legislatures, and all executive and judicial officers, both of the United States and of the several states, shall be bound by oath or affirmation, to support this Constitution; but no religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or public trust under the United States.”

In my humble opinion, we have lost the meaning of religion, and those who “swear” by their faith believe more in dogma than the spirit. Thus, “religious test” would not even be an accurate statement given today’s standards. It is not religion we see mixed with politics, but dogma. It is not appreciation of God or spirit, but a belief system one must adhere to in order to belong to the “winning” side. Religion, in the truest sense of the word, is a set of beliefs concerning the cause, nature, and purpose of the universe, and often containing a moral code governing the conduct of human affairs. Politics of late, and perhaps always, certainly lacks moral code; simply witness the latest presidential primaries.

Furthermore, religious tolerance, perhaps one of the most important aspects of being religious, is all but abandoned. It is important to treat another’s religion as you wish yours to be treated. We have seen that when religious dogma mixes with politics, we lose all sense of religion.

Ryan Fuchs, mechanical engineer, blogger (Minneapolis, Minnesota)

The religious views (or lack thereof) should be no more relevant to their office than their sex or the color of their skin. The drafters of our Constitution understood this and bothered to state exactly that quite clearly. Many voters, however, are happy to be comforted with the knowledge that someone thinks as they do beyond the pertinent issues. In order to gain sway with this group, a candidate will advertise their religious beliefs. This has become the norm in elections of late. So much so that a growing number of people think the Constitution should be altered to make faith in a god necessary. I think that’s as silly as the desire to teach “creationism” in public schools. You’re free to have faith in whatever you choose. So am I. And so is anyone running for a public office.

John Amen , writer, musician, and founder and editor of The Pedestal Magazine (Charlotte, North Carolina)

Well, in theory politics and religion aren’t supposed to mix; i.e., a politician ought to be able to run a successful campaign regardless of his or her religious leanings. But we know that isn’t the case in America, at least currently. Bottom line, you’re not going to get elected to any significant office in America unless you espouse Christian principles. Clearly this is the case as far as getting the Republican vote but, in the end, I think it’s true with the Democratic vote, too. If you’re not a “Christian,” you’re fundamentally “the other,” regardless of all the PC talk, etc. This might change at some point. I mean, we’re looking at having a woman or African American in office, so that’s huge progress. Perhaps we’ll experience progress, too, in the relationship between politics and religion. But right now, if you espouse too loudly anything that departs from what’s considered essentially Christian, you’re probably not going to get very far.

Shawn Sturgeon, writer, author of Either/Ur (The River City Poetry Series) (Denver, Colorado)

There has always been an unofficial religious test for political candidates in the United States, since in the broadest terms, religion is concerned with the morals and values of a community. The question that challenges each generation of Americans is this: Who will write the test? We find the nature of the conflict over religion in American political life in two contradictory mottos engraved on the money we spend daily — “In God We Trust” and “E Pluribus Unum.” The first motto represents one way of deciding who writes the test: Let a single group with a sincere but narrow ideology determine the candidate who best represents “the good life” as they understand it. The second motto represents another approach: Respect differences of opinion and practice while achieving a consensus that “the best life” excludes no one. Personally, I favor the latter approach, but what does a poet know? Now I need to get back to chasing beaches and flowers.

Pris Campbell, writer , clinical psychologist (West Palm Beach, Florida)

If we’re talking theoretically, yes, of course they should. A candidate should be judged on his or her qualifications, alone. That’s not the way voters’ minds work, though, and sometimes with good reason. It’s only human nature to look at a candidate’s beliefs/religious associations, since we feel, at some level, those two things could play a role in political decisions. Take the flap with Obama’s minister, for example. When I saw the videos of him denigrating white people, calling us the U.S. of KKK, saying that 9/11 was a punishment … well, to know that this man was like family to Obama floored me. It also dramatically increased my leeriness about his potential presidency. A white minister could never be televised making racial statements and not damage a close political friend in the process. Obama has only said that his friend had the right to say what he thinks (which he does), but he’s not gone further, as of this writing, to say he disagrees adamantly with the anti-white statements.

The flap with Obama’s minister is even worse than when John Kennedy was running for office. The outcry was “Do we want the Pope to run our county?” I still remember that campaign. People were terrified over that issue. Now, if a Catholic ran, it would be a moot point. I wonder how a candidate who was close friends with a TV evangelist telling us he’s been called by God to collect money from little old ladies living on tiny SS checks would fare? Bottom line, beware of your bedfellows. Religious or not, they may kick you in the kneecaps when you least expect it.

David Paskey, graphic designer and songwriter (Chicago, Illinois)

I am not a fan of labels, so while I am reluctant to call myself a “Christian,” I would say that I aim to be a follower of Christ. My beliefs are not just an area of my life; I see them as something that runs through all of the parts of my life and the decisions I make. But I think it is important that a candidate realize that she/he would be serving the whole of the populace, those of many backgrounds and beliefs, including the belief in no God. So it is important to make choices that best serve the basic human rights and needs of the populace, while using one’s personal beliefs as a motivator to continually seek what is best for the public. I do not think it right to require a person to adhere to any belief in order to hold office. However, I feel it is human nature that people tend to elect a person who seems to hold their common interests and beliefs at heart, whether those beliefs be Christianity, Islam, Agnosticism, Scientific Inquiry, etc. Who the “right person for the job” is seems inextricably tied to the voters’ own beliefs. But once elected, it is important to remember that you serve the whole of society, not just the people who believe as you do or elected you.

Barton Smock, InTheFray contributor (Columbus, Ohio)

Is there a “religious test” in politics? One that can be passed, anyway? I don’t think so.  Voters have their pencils, and boxes that mark a soul. And politicians sharpen those pencils accordingly. If a test exists, it is merely of a need to get the right students in the classroom. I don’t doubt that many in office hold personal, strong beliefs of moral content in regards to religion, and vice versa, but I am not one to believe that these personal beliefs are on display in full. They are parsed and directed. And when they are on display in full, when they are not personally exclusive, they are uncompromising and damaging. See the current administration. And, in a possible misquoting of a William Stafford poem, the Aztec design has God in a pea that is rolling out of the picture. We say god is everywhere, but how did he get out of the pea? What I believe has been given to me, mostly, by others. So, as humans, I think it is our responsibility to remain human.  The internal is more external than we think. If one wants to name it god, or post it on the refrigerator like so many totems, so be it. God should be in the picture, so long as he remains in the pea.

Joel Lowenstein (Charlotte, North Carolina)

I believe strongly in the First Amendment’s separation of church and state. This separation is the fundamental difference between a theocracy and a democracy. The question of whether we are, as a people, to follow the dictates of conscience or those of organized religion can be a contentious one. We must only look at history to see the failures of governing from a religious pulpit. The puritans left England to escape religious persecution; at that time the government and the church were practically one and the same. The safeguards written into the First Amendment were put there to protect the citizenry from religious intolerance, to prevent religious prejudice and persecution.   There should be no political religious test, lest we fall prey to religious zealotry or xenophobes and are all decreed heretics.

Joel Lowenstein is a military veteran who was conscripted into the service during the Viet Nam era; he was honorably discharged from the service in 1972. He resides with his wife and two daughters in Charlotte, North Carolina, where he currently is the owner and president of a for-hire maintenance repair, home improvement corporation.

 

Mixed media Valentines

200702_valeth.jpg

200702_valeth.jpg

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

For this February issue of InTheFray, photographer Kenji Mizumori and poet Annette Marie Hyder combined their art into “photoems” that speak to longing, loss, and attraction. Happy Valentine’s Day!

[Click here to enter the visual essay.]

 

Facing Feminism: Feminists I Know

Are you sick of being told what it is that matters to you as a feminist? Do you feel moved to express your feminism and connect in a powerful way with feminists from around the world? Want to speak up and be heard?

FACING FEMINISM: FEMINISTS I KNOW is a project in which, through portrait art and words, the many different faces of feminism are visually demonstrated. The project is designed to make a statement in contradiction to the stereotype, the one-dimensional portrayal, of  feminists, that is dominant in the media. In addition to putting a more varied and representative “face” to feminism, and thus being a tool for education and advocacy, this project aims to enlarge the current dialogue about what it means to be a feminist and also to help feminists conceptualize a philosophy of feminism that works for them. It will help to de-demonize the concept of feminism.

Some feminists love wearing heels and perfume. Some don’t. Some have alternative lifestyles while some are stay-at-home mothers. Concomitant with the many things that distinguish feminists individually, there are the things that unite them: their strength and intelligence and their belief that they are entitled to equal opportunity in all spheres of life.

The project is hosted through the MNARTISTS.ORG website, distributed through the media via the magazine EMPOWERMENT4WOMEN, and curated by Annette Marie Hyder. For this series, each feminist is invited to submit a photo of her choosing and a text forum to express her feminism. Each statement is individual to each feminist, and so it shows how individual feminists interpret the freedoms that they want within their common bond.

Happy International Women’s Day!

The photoems can be viewed at EMPOWERMENT4WOMEN.ORG and at the MNARTISTS website.

Annette Marie Hyder

 

WAM! (Women, Action and the Media)

We look into the mirror of popular media hoping to see ourselves — only a better, a glossier version of ourselves — something we can aspire to. We are also looking for a sense of belonging with the culture at large.

What if, in looking in the media mirror, you see no reflection but are a “societal vampire”? (In vampire lore, a vampire’s reflection cannot be seen in a mirror.) What if you can’t see yourself in that mirror at all? Or, what if your image is so distorted as to represent not a sublimated version of self but a monstrosity?

Minorities marginalized in media is an ongoing concern.

I was excited to read about this, an oportunity to have a hand in “silvering the mirror,” over at feministing.com:

WAM!’s annual conference, now in its third year, invites progressive journalists, authors, activists, bloggers, students, and fed-up TV viewers to come together to share skills, trade information, exchange strategies, and inform and inspire one another to make noise and make change.

Sponsored by the Center for New Words and the MIT Program in Women’s Studies, the WAM! conference is from March 31 – April 2 in Cambridge, MA.

The Center for New Words is dedicated to a simple mission (from the site): “To use the power and creativity of words and ideas to strengthen the voice of progressive and marginalized women in society.”

To accomplish this mission, The Center for New Words’ programs support diverse women’s engagement with the entire “word cycle,” from literacy to blogging to literary writing to opinion-making in the media and other domains of influence.

Annette Marie Hyder

 

The strength of stones

A Pakistani woman refuses to be shamed by the hurtful actions of others.

… like streams of water in a waterless country,
like the shadow of a heavy crag in an exhausted land.

—Psalms 32:2

This is a true story about a woman who was a stone: strong as the bones of the earth.

And she was a pebble. Not in that she was insignificant but rather that she was small but she made a difference, just like that small pebble that can start an avalanche. And she was flint. Not in that she was hard but rather that she was able to strike a spark, set fire to hidebound customs and to many hearts and hands.

And she was granite but not in that she was inflexible. But rather, she was the stuff of mountains, soaring-majestic-inspiring-awesome, and she was onyx, jade, verdite, serpentine, and jasper, beautiful indeed.

But at first she was just a stone in Pakistan, used to hurt her brother, a rock thrown at him; gang-raped on the orders of a local justice council to atone for her brother’s “crime.” He was charged with rape by her village jirga to keep him from telling how he had been sodomized – by leading Mastoi men.

She screamed for help while she was dragged in front of hordes of villagers. She begged for mercy. But no one came to her aid. And it was as if she was stoned as well as raped, in that there were stones in the hands of a mob-like tradition, in that the villagers became stones themselves and bruised the skin of compassion largely with multi-colored and livid marks.

Naked and shivering she walked back home, her feet bare, her path lined – with silent spectators.

In that wilderness of patriarchy, rape victims are known to kill themselves in shame. She could marry – a deep dark well of obliterating water – death bride to Lethe-like relief or shed tears all her life – monsoonic misery storms of grief and wild wailing winds of anger.

She refused to be cairned with shame.

She took the council to court and in the ensuing worldwide attention the Pakistani government tried to block her way. Standing stones of travel restrictions were placed in her way, menhirs – her rapists were jailed but then set free – monolithic obstructions – but her feet were made of water. And more than mere standing stones can be worn away with the obstinacy of water.

She is: avalanche starter, mountain breaker, a stone with feet of water.

She fought back with resolute strength. And she won with a noise in the midst of the news of the world that sounded like a mountain’s CRACK to the women, stones upon stones in places around the world.

The government awarded her $8,300 in cash and she took that money – and started the village’s first-ever school. She has dedicated her life to social work, to education, in that, she has built a school and teaches the Koran to young girls and boys – she says “If women aren’t educated, it’s hard for them to speak up for themselves.” She has even enrolled her rapists’ children. And women everywhere, from women who live in deserts of sand, like hers, to women who live in deserts of moral dehydration and societal dessicance, are saying her name – Mukhtaran Mai.

She has shown that we are stones – who dwell among stones – each building upon the other but each defining – by individual actions – what can or cannot be – Mukhtaran Mai.

She has become polished obsidian for other women to see themselves within. And her name has become a stone in the hands of women far and wide and around this world – Mukhtaran Mai. Her name has become a stone in the collective fist of resistance raised against silence and humiliation. And her name has become the rush and the sound of water – running its course to freedom.

Mukhtaran Mai – many women have been silent stones all their lives.

Mukhtaran Mai – you have called these stones to witness and they will speak.

Mukhtaran Mai – they will speak.