http://www.shns.com/shns/g_index2.cfm?action=detail&pk=WICCANS-03-23-06

Feds weigh allowing Wiccan symbols on govt.-issued
grave markers 

By LISA HOFFMAN
Scripps Howard News Service 
23-MAR-06 

While President Bush laid a wreath at the Tomb of the
Unknowns at Arlington National Cemetery, a
self-declared witch embarked on a clandestine mission
to mark a grave most dear to her.

It was 2003, and neo-pagan high priestess Rosemary
Kooiman, 75, was determined that the gravesite of her
recently departed husband, Abraham, bear a Pentacle as
the symbol of the Wiccan faith the two shared.

Unlike thousands of headstones bearing a Christian
cross, Jewish Star of David, Islamic Crescent and
Star, or other religious emblems, Abraham Kooiman's
had none because the Department of Veterans Affairs
does not permit symbols of Wicca and related pagan
sects to be depicted on government-issued stones or
markers.

Taking advantage of the attention turned elsewhere
that day, Rosemary Kooiman affixed a vinyl Pentacle _
a five-pointed star within a circle _ to the gravesite
of her husband, a decorated World War II combat
veteran.

That guerrilla action by Kooiman came as part of a
decade-long battle by those of her faith to bring
recognition to troops and veterans who are Wiccans and
believers in other "nature" religions.

Long wrongfully tagged by the misinformed as being
Satan worshippers or the casters of evil spells, they
say their ancient religion is a peaceful, benign one
centered on celebrating nature through rituals,
meditations and other spiritual practices.

Why then, they ask, has their religion been snubbed
when more than 30 others _ including such relatively
obscure ones as Seicho-No-Ie, Eckankar, Sufism and
Humanism _ are permitted? Even atheists have their own
approved symbol, which features an atom and the letter
"A" in the center.

"These people served their country. Isn't America
about freedom of religion? They fought for that
freedom," said the Rev. Selena Fox, a senior minister
and frequent spokeswoman for her neo-pagan faith, as
well as a prime mover in the effort for government
recognition.

That crusade may be nearing an end. The Veterans
department said this week that it is nearing a
decision on several requests for memorial markers
adorned with Pentacles, including one from the widow
of a National Guardsman killed in a helicopter attack
in Afghanistan.

"We expect a decision soon," said Jo Schuda, a VA
spokeswoman.

In a step interpreted as partially smoothing the way
for Pentacle approval, the VA's National Cemetery
Administration amended a rule last October that had
been a bureaucratic roadblock. Until then, applicants
had to submit a letter from a "recognized central
head" of the faith attesting to the fact that the
requested symbol in fact represented the religion.

But because the Wiccan faith and its related sects are
substantially decentralized, that requirement was
essentially impossible to meet. Now, the National
Cemetery Administration asks for a letter from "a
recognized leader."

No one is quite sure how many Wiccans there are in the
ranks of military veterans and active-duty troops.
Estimates by the Pentagon's chaplains' board put the
number of Wiccans at under 2,000, out of the 1.4
million troops in uniform.

Fox, whose Wisconsin-based Circle Sanctuary church
claims nearly 54,000 U.S. members, thinks the number
of Wiccans in uniform is substantially higher than the
Pentagon estimate. Many more likely remain in the
religious closet, concerned that they would be tainted
by misconceptions about the faith, she said.

But for nearly a decade, the armed services have made
it a point to be tolerant of Wiccans and other faiths
outside the mainstream. Military chaplains, who are
trained to meet the needs of all faiths, held their
first Wiccan service in 1997 at Fort Hood, Texas.
Today, it is not uncommon to find listings for Wicca
rituals on many military base coming-events
announcements.

One soldier who was open about his Wiccan faith was
Nevada National Guard Sgt. Patrick Stewart, who was
killed last September along with four other U.S.
troops when the Chinook helicopter carrying them was
shot down in Afghanistan. His widow, Roberta Stewart,
vowed to push the VA to accept the Wiccan faith and
allow a Pentacle on her husband's plaque hung on a
memorial wall at the Northern Nevada Veterans Memorial
Cemetery.

Her cause got a substantial boost when Nevada GOP Rep.
Jim Gibbons spoke out in her behalf this month. So,
too, did Lt. Col. Robert Harington, battalion
commander of Patrick Stewart's Guard unit.

"Every family should have the ability to honor their
fallen loved ones who made the ultimate sacrifice in
defending freedom and this nation," Gibbons, a veteran
of Operation Desert Storm, said in a statement. "It is
my hope that the VA will act expeditiously to resolve
this matter."

Whatever the resolution, one who will not be around to
see it _ at least in her incarnation as Abraham's
wife, mother of three, government safety officer, and
founder of the Wiccan Nomadic Chantry of the Gramarye
_ is Rosemary Kooiman. She died of a heart attack at
her home in Laurel, Md., on March 5.

"I'm sad that she wasn't able to see this approved
before she died," Fox said.

Gargoyle's Paranormal Investigations - 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/gargoylenews

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