Is the symbol frightening to you? It is to many people.
This is called a pentacle and it is a symbol of the Wicca religion. To many, this is a symbol of evil and of witchcraft, not of a benign faith.
The five points of the star symbolize earth, wind, fire, spirit and water. Wiccans call their religion nature-based and say that it is not affiliated in any way with the occult. They claim to have no god to worship, and worship only nature itself.
Until today, the United States government has refused fallen soliders
the right to place the pentacle on government provided headstones in
military cemetaries.
The Bush Administration has finally agreed, after a decade of struggle and lawsuits, to add the pentacle to be added to the list of 38 approved symbols. It now joins the Christian cross, the Jewish six-pointed star, the Islamic crescent,
and the symbols for atheists, Hindus, humanists, Sikhs and members of such lesser-known religions as the Eckankar, Serbian
Orthodox and United Moravia faiths.
Even though the pentacle had been allowed for some time to be added to dog tags and military chaplains were advised about the facts regarding this religion of its nearly 1300 service members who claimed it as their faith, accusations of Wicca not qualifying as a "true" religion have been bandied about within Conservative Right for years.
George Bush, in 1999 as governor of Texas admonished military officials for allowing troops at Fort Hood to hold Wiccan services. "I don't think witchcraft is a religion," Bush
reportedly said. "I would hope the military officials would take a
second look..."
Our first amendment says "
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof..."
The amendment doesn't say "some" religions, it says simply "religion".
When an American solider gives the ultimate gift of his or her life to this country to protect, in part, the Constitution of this great country and their freedom to practice ANY religion, one should hope that his or her final wishes about their headstone should be honored.
Read the Washington Post Article HERE
Record YOUR final wishes at InRepose.com
Photo courtesy of Candice Courtney her website here.
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