Pluralism is a Wound
by Christopher Cantwell
I was going to write about something else. For weeks I had planned to write about the reluctance of public historians to seriously contend with religion, which I've been ranting about on twitter for a while. But then Sunday's shooting at the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin happened. Suddenly, my interest in the more mundane controversies of American religious life seemed trivial by comparison.
I was going to write about something else. For weeks I had planned to write about the reluctance of public historians to seriously contend with religion, which I've been ranting about on twitter for a while. But then Sunday's shooting at the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin happened. Suddenly, my interest in the more mundane controversies of American religious life seemed trivial by comparison.
I'm sure most of you are aware of the facts.
The news is everywhere. Indeed, writing four days later as I am seems almost an eternity in this information age. The
story has already moved far down the Huffington Post's thumbnailed hierarchy of
worth, and most other news outlets have returned to covering the Olympics. But
I'm still unable shake Sunday's attack. Unlike the Aurora theatre shooting,
which was carried out by an individual that appears to have been driven by his
own instability, the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin's attacker was, according to the
FBI, politically or racially motivated. Again, the news here is almost old hat,
but bears repeating. Wade M. Page, a forty-year-old
Army veteran with a long history of involvement in the white supremacy
movement, walked into the Temple moments before its services began and opened
fire. Page first confronted a handful of priests, including the Temple's
sixty-five-year-old founder Sadwant Singh Kaleka. In an act that some say saved the lives
of many, Kaleka challenged Page with his Kirpan, the blunt ceremonial
knife some Sikhs carry as a reminder of their duty to protect the oppressed
that then became a literal weapon of defense. Kaleka's attack was futile, but
the noise from the multiple shots it took to stop him were enough to send others
in the temple into hiding. Page would go on to kill five other
Temple
members before dying himself in a gunfight with police.
The response to the attack has been typical,
if appallingly sparse. Some have taken the approach of viewing Sunday's attack
as a national tragedy, an affront upon America's principles of religious
freedom that should affect us all. "Today, we
are all American Sikhs," writes filmmaker Valarie Kaur over at CNN.
Others, presuming Page confused this temple of Dastar-wearing Sikhs with
a community of turbaned Muslims, look upon the attack as further evidence that
Americans badly need to take more religious studies courses. "Ignorance breeds
hatred," writes Jana Reiss with the Religion News Service. "Hatred breeds violence." But in an important counterpoint to all of these
nationalistic or cosmopolitan responses to Page's naked violence, Amardeep Singh, an Associate
Professor of English at Lehigh University, asks whether the ability to
distinguish between Sikhs and Muslims, or an appreciation of America's
commitment to religious freedom, could really stem the fear one may have to the
embodied markers of racial or religious difference. "Whether or not that
target was actually the 'right one' was beside the point for the Oak Creek
shooter," Singh writes.
It's that both [the Dastar and the turban] have the potential
to provoke a kind of visceral reaction by these marks of religious
difference worn on the body. Sometimes that reaction is simply a sense of
discomfort or confusion, easily allayed by a winning smile or a comment about
the local sports team or the weather. Sometimes, however, that negative
reaction runs deeper and can't be readily resolved.
As for me, I've been reflecting upon Sunday's shooting in light of
the ongoing "Out of Many:
Religious Pluralism in America" program I head up at the Newberry. As part of
a summer workshop I've previously
blogged about, Martin Marty gave an evening
lecture reflecting on the nature of America's historic commitment to religious
pluralism. An observation that at the time impressed me was Marty's celebration
of the conflicts inherent to America's religious diversity (and you can listen
to or download Marty’s lecture here). Pluralism,
Marty argued, embraces the productive tensions of diversity. It’s when we
offend out of ignorance, are embarrassed, and apologize that we grow both
individually and collectively. At the time I could relate. That moment you have
an observant Jewish classmate over and order only pepperoni pizza? I’ve been
there. And I apologized and I grew. But in the face of the unabashed hate on
display in Oak Creek, Wisconsin, Marty’s rather positive perspective on America’s
religious past seems almost too innocent. Sure, America has not succumbed to
the kind of religious wars, ethnic cleansings, or mass genocides seen throughout world history. But what good is progress when we have to compare the United
States to early modern Europe, the third world, or Nazi Germany to see it?
I don’t really have an answer. Like Singh, I’m both heartbroken and
speechless at Sunday’s tragic attack. But I also can’t help but wonder, how do
we, as scholars, educators, and advocates of American religious history approach
and address such incidents as well as the larger issues of hate and
misunderstanding they reveal? How do we utilize our classrooms, research, and
writing to create spaces that recognize and understand the fears and
vulnerabilities of a Wade Page while simultaneously diffusing them? Again, I
don’t have an answer. But I'm eager to have conversations that can suggest answers. In the
end, I hope that we’ll some day reach a point where my most pressing concern is
the lack of good articles about religion in the Public
Historian.
Comments
Finally, I had actually signed on to share this new op ed in the NYTimes which makes many of my same points in a more expanded fashion.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/11/us/if-the-sikh-temple-had-been-a-muslim-mosque-on-religion.html?_r=3