May
31, 2005
Pressure
to Be “Born Again”
at the Air Force Academy
by Jon
M. Sweeney
It
appears that proselytizing pressure is brought to bear on cadets
at the Air Force Academy to become “born again” Christians.
Non-evangelical Protestants, Roman Catholics, and Jews have felt
undue pressure to convert, participate in evangelical services,
and join in prayer meetings on numerous occasions, according
to reports now coming from the campus in Colorado Springs, Colorado.
The
firing of MeLinda Morton, a Lutheran chaplain—who
was also the executive officer for all sixteen chaplains at the
school—brought increased scrutiny to the situation.
In
its May 13 story, The Washington Post interviewed former cadet
Mickey Weinstein, a 1977 graduate. “[Weinstein] said
he has repeatedly complained to the Air Force brass about the ‘religious
pressure’ on cadets,” according to the article by
T. R. Reid. “‘This is not Christian versus Jew,’ Weinstein
said. ‘This is the evangelical Christians against everybody
else.’” The New York Times reported on May 24 that
Weinstein “has been collecting complaints about religious
intimidation at the academy for over a year.”
Ironically,
the “born again” controversy at the
academy was brought on, in part, by a previous crisis. Due to
earlier accusations of sexual harassment on campus, a committee
at the Air Force Academy invited a group from Yale Divinity School,
led by Prof. Kristen Leslie of Yale, to evaluate the training
of incoming freshmen cadets this past summer. It was in the course
of their review that the Yale Divinity School group submitted
a report detailing what they found.
Their
findings included the conclusion that evangelical Christians
dominated the campus in ways that were felt to be threatening
to others. The report, co-authored by Chaplain Morton with Prof.
Leslie, claims that pressure is routinely brought to bear on
cadets to accept evangelical Christian tenets of faith and that
this particular brand of faith is taught by many chaplains, faculty
members, and senior officers of the Academy as one of the hallmarks
of a unit’s cohesiveness. It was Chaplain Morton’s
agreement with those findings that prompted her dismissal. She
was fired via an email sent by her immediate supervisor, Col.
Michael Whittington, on May 2.
Other
religious groups are lining up behind Chaplain Morton and wanting
more information about the situation. In February, Jewish
War Veterans of the U.S.A. (www.jwv.org)
issued a press release condemning the alleged practices as well
as others, including one reported instance when the coach of
the Academy’s
football team, Fisher DeBerry, posted a banner in the team’s
locker room: “I am
a Christian first and last. I am a member of Team Jesus Christ.”
Americans
United for Separation of Church and State issued its own fourteen
page report on the Academy last month, on April
28.
It
included the following summary, written by Rev. Barry W. Lynn,
executive director of AUSCS, and Ayesha N. Khan, its legal
director: “We have been informed that General Weida [of
the Academy] has cultivated and reinforced an attitude—shared
by many in the Academy Chaplains’ Office and, increasingly,
by other members of the Academy’s permanent [staff]—that
the Academy, and the Air Force in general, would be better off
if populated solely by Christians. A stronger message of official
preference for one particular faith is hard to imagine.”
The
situation at the Air Force Academy is also now becoming political.
On May 23, according to The New York Times report
published on May 24, Chaplain Morton sent letters to 46 members
of Congress who had earlier demanded an investigation into the
matter of the report and Chaplain Morton’s dismissal. She
has asked Congress to look deeper into the matter, and quickly.
There
is probably no issue like religion where a policy of “Don’t
ask, don’t tell” is more appropriate than for those
in positions of authority in the military.
Jon Sweeney is an author and editor living
in Vermont. His latest book is
THE LURE OF SAINTS: A PROTESTANT EXPERIENCE
OF CATHOLIC TRADITION. More
by Jon Sweeney.
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