nephandi
Posts: 4470
Joined: 9/23/2005 From: Cold and magickal Norway in a town near Bergen! Status: offline
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Greetings quote:
I would feel exactly the same way if he was a Christian, or a Jew, or a Buddist, or even a vague Deist with a fondness for Pagan sacraments, such as myself, Nephandi And nobody is taking his religion from him. He is being denied unlimited participation in certain rituals of his faith, for security reasons. Religion lives inside the mind and spirit of the individual. God, by whatever name, can still live in the heart of the prisoner in the deepest, darkest, most isolated hole. So can evil. Here is the rub, we all have different views of religion. For some it is enough to believe, but for others they need to practice certain rituals to be true to their faith. I feel that if it is real security concerns then the prison should work out a way to let their prisoners practice their religion in a safer way but to flat out deny prisoners to practice their faith that I feel is wrong. Now yes in this case he can practice as he can pray his required five times a day though not under ideal circumstances, but in many other cases non Christian religions are almost completely blocked in American prisons, which is against the law, and usually the security concerns argument is used, but I feel that security concerns have become a catch phrase that can be used to justify any misuse of power. Off course sometimes there are actual security concerns, but I do not think one should immediately accept it even if that argument is used. I wish you well
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Whatever you think you can do or believe you can do, begin it. Action has magic, grace and power in it.--Johann Wolfgang von Goethe Futon torpedoes, make love not war!--Aswad
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