Pagan Sings Invocation Before Local Town Meeting
Posted: Tue Oct 07, 2014 3:14 pm
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RjkwPK8HuKQ
This is pretty amazing. Here you can see David Suhor, a Pagan in Florida, sing Starhawk's quarter call before the local town meeting. In part, this was to protest a recent US Supreme Court decision to permit sectarian prayer before town meetings, despite a long history of town officials preferring to exclude minority faiths' from delivering the invocation. David Suhor believes that the only truly inclusive way to have an invocation is to have a moment of silence. You can definitely tell in the video the people shuffling awkwardly -- one councilman walked out even before the invocation was delivered.
As I've mentioned before, I think Town of Greece v. Galloway has been an important decision in that it is rolling back the rights of people who practice minority faiths or no faith at all by permitting the practices of majority faiths (Christianity) to dominate public settings and deliberately exclude expressions of minority faiths. Real freedom of religion should mean an entirely secular government -- that's the only fair way to be inclusive of everyone's religion. Until then, I applaud David Suhor's efforts to protest this decision by giving the supporters of the SCOTUS decision just a tiny taste of what it's like to be forced to pray against your conscience.
This is pretty amazing. Here you can see David Suhor, a Pagan in Florida, sing Starhawk's quarter call before the local town meeting. In part, this was to protest a recent US Supreme Court decision to permit sectarian prayer before town meetings, despite a long history of town officials preferring to exclude minority faiths' from delivering the invocation. David Suhor believes that the only truly inclusive way to have an invocation is to have a moment of silence. You can definitely tell in the video the people shuffling awkwardly -- one councilman walked out even before the invocation was delivered.
As I've mentioned before, I think Town of Greece v. Galloway has been an important decision in that it is rolling back the rights of people who practice minority faiths or no faith at all by permitting the practices of majority faiths (Christianity) to dominate public settings and deliberately exclude expressions of minority faiths. Real freedom of religion should mean an entirely secular government -- that's the only fair way to be inclusive of everyone's religion. Until then, I applaud David Suhor's efforts to protest this decision by giving the supporters of the SCOTUS decision just a tiny taste of what it's like to be forced to pray against your conscience.