On Being Blog

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130226-M-IX060-006The United States Marine Corps Wounded Warrior Regiment provides and facilitates assistance to wounded, ill and injured Marines, sailors attached to or in support of Marine units, and their family members in order to assist them as they return to duty or transition to civilian life. (Photo by Cpl. Tyler L. Main)

“I really don’t like the term ‘PTSD,’” Department of Veterans Affairs psychiatrist Dr. Jonathan Shay told PBS’ “Religion & Ethics Newsweekly” in 2010. “He says the diagnostic definition of “post-traumatic stress disorder” is a fine description of certain instinctual survival skills that persist into everyday life after a person has been in mortal danger — but the definition doesn’t address the entirety of a person’s injury after the trauma of war. ”I view the persistence into civilian life after battle,” he says, “… as the simple or primary injury.”

Dr. Shay has his own name for the thing the clinical definition of PTSD leaves out. He calls it “moral injury” — and the term is catching on with both the VA and the Department of Defense.

We’re turning our attention to this idea of moral injury and the limits of the PTSD diagnosis to explore what happens to a person who has experienced combat.

There are no clean lines separating PTSD from moral injury (which is not a diagnosis) — there is no Venn Diagram, as with PTSD and traumatic brain injury – but Dr. Shay explains a fundamental difference by using a shrapnel wound as an analogy.

“Whether it breaks the bone or not,” he says, “that wound is the uncomplicated — or primary — injury. That doesn’t kill the soldier; what kills him are the complications — infection or hemorrhage.”

Post-traumatic stress disorder, Dr. Shay explains, is the primary injury, the “uncomplicated injury.” Moral injury is the infection; it’s the hemorrhaging.

PTSD in service members is often tied to being the target of an attack — or being close in relationship or proximity to that target.

Moral injury, Dr. Shay says, can happen when “there is a betrayal of what’s right by someone who holds legitimate authority in a high-stakes situation.”

That person who’s betraying “what’s right” could be a superior — or that person could be you. Maybe it’s that you killed somebody or were ordered to kill. Or maybe it was something tragic that you could have stopped, but didn’t. Guilt and shame are at the center of moral injury. And, as Dr. Shay describes it, so is a shrinking of what he calls “the moral and social horizon.” When a person’s moral horizon shrinks, he says, so do a person’s ideals and attachments and ambitions.

I first came across Dr. Shay’s name — and his concept of moral injury in combat veterans — in a heart-smashing profile of Noah Pierce published by the formidable Virginia Quarterly Review.

The Life and Lonely Death of Noah PierceThe Life and Lonely Death of Noah Pierce” tells the story of an Iraq War veteran from Sparta, Minnesota, who shot himself in the head in 2007 at the age of 23.

From Ashley Gilbertson’s profile of Pierce:

“When Noah went missing in July 2007, after a harrowing year adjusting to home following two tours in Iraq, police ordered a countywide search. His friend Ryan Nelson thought he might know where to look. When he pulled up to the spot, he immediately recognized Noah’s truck. Inside, Ryan found his friend slumped over the bench seat, his head blown apart, the gun in his right hand. Half a bottle of Jack Daniel’s Special Blend lay on the passenger seat, and beer cans were strewn about. On the dash lay his photo IDs; he had stabbed each photo through the face. And on the floorboard was the scrawled, rambling suicide note. It was his final attempt to explain the horrors he had seen–and committed.”

Gilbertson told Noah’s story to Jonathan Shay. Again, from the article:

“Shay, a psychiatrist who has worked with combat vets for twenty years and authored two books about PTSD — or psychological and moral injury, as he insists it should be known — told me by phone from his Newton, Mass., office, ‘It’s titanic pain that these men live with. They don’t feel that they can get that across, in part because they feel they deserve it, and in part because they don’t feel people will understand it.’

“‘Despair, this word that’s so hard to get our arms around,’ he said. ‘It’s despair that rips people apart [who] feel they’ve become irredeemable.’

“I told Dr. Shay about Noah’s experiences in Iraq, in particular the killing, the loss of comrades, the nightmares. He sounded saddened on the phone, but unsurprised. ‘The flip side of this fellow’s despair was the murderous rages he experienced on his second tour,’ he said. ‘In combat, soldiers become each other’s mothers. The rage, need for revenge, and self-sacrificial commitment toward protecting each other when comrades are killed [are] akin to when a mother’s offspring are put in danger or killed.’

“Dr. Shay explained the nightmares and sleeplessness were one of the major issues. ‘The lack of sleep contributed directly to a loss of control of his own anger, a loss of control of things he felt morally responsible for.’”

Treating moral injury in combat veterans, Dr. Shay said in the PBS interview, happens not in the clinic, but in the community.

“Peers are the key to recovery — I can’t emphasize that enough,” he said. “Credentialed mental health professionals like me have no place in center stage. It’s the veterans themselves, healing each other, that belong at center stage. We are stagehands — get the lights on, sweep out the gum wrappers, count the chairs, make sure it’s a safe and warm enough place…”

He doesn’t write off clinical care, though he does disparage “cookie-cutter treatments.”

“We’re certainly doing a lot of things,” he says, “but whether we’re actually preserving vets’ capacity to have a flourishing life after war, I don’t know. I just don’t know.”


Jeff Severns Guntzel is senior reporter for the Public Insight Network (PIN). He has reported from the Middle East and points all over the United States for a cadre of publications and news organizations that are not usually mentioned in the same sentence, including Punk Planet Magazine, National Catholic Reporter, Village Voice Media, MinnPost.com, and GOOD. He also did time as an editor at Utne Reader.

Read more of Jeff's reporting as part of the Public Insight Network's veterans health project on vets and all those working to help them navigate life after combat.

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An Elven LadyImage by Christos Tsoumplekas / Flickr, cc by-nc 2.0

Fairy tale themes abound in television and movies right now. And they’re not just for children anymore. Via ISDN, Krista Tippett interviewed Maria Tatar, a scholar of the Brothers Grimm and other classic tales who chairs the Program in Folklore and Mythology at Harvard University. They discuss what these old stories work in us — and how we work through them on our fears and our hopes. I live-tweeted the gems of their conversation — and there were many — and hope you'll share them with others.

Students discuss the Congressional Civil Rights Pilgrimage at 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama.Students discuss the Congressional Civil Rights Pilgrimage at 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama. (Photo by Sandi Villarreal)

Empathy at the Cleveland Clinic

If you could stand in someone else's shoes... Hear what they hear. See what they see. Feel what they feel. Would you treat them differently? A video that speaks to the connections we all need.



Phil Lakin (@phlakin) of Tulsa, Oklahoma watched and responded with this observation:

It's unlikely you will have dry eyes after watching this. If I ever had a superpower, I would want the power to heal.

Krista PearsonAnd on our Facebook page, Minneapolitan Krista Pearson wondered:

Beautiful indeed and so much sadness. Holding the paradoxes of life in balance can be a challenge (at least for the sensitive). Is it possible to empathize too much?

I ask you. What would be your reply? Rejoin her on the discussion thread.

"All the possibilities of you human destiny are asleep in your soul. You are here to realize and honor these possibilities. Possibility is the secret heart of time." ~John O' Donohue, photo by Lauren RushingLaura Rushing's photo paired with these words from John O'Donohue's Anam Cara: A Book of Celtic Wisdom rippled throughout our social spheres this week:

"All the possibilities of your human destiny are asleep in your soul. You are here to realize and honor these possibilities. When love comes in to your life, unrecognized dimensions of your destiny awaken and blossom and grow. Possibility is the secret heart of time."

Jacqueline and Former Student JudithAnd, this past Friday on International Women's Day, an exploration of notions of womanhood through the great lyrical voices of Rilke, Whitman, and de Chardin in remembrance of guest contributor A.E. Lefton's mother:

"I believe women will hold our heads higher, despite the heaviness of our crowns, once we begin to see ourselves the way Rilke and Whitman saw us — but grounded in the good earth of our own lives."

Sketchnotes of Fr. Greg Boyle's Interview with Krista TippettThese sketchnotes capture Fr. Greg Boyle's ideas about kinship and service.

"The day will never come when I am as holy as the people I serve."

If you haven't had a chance, sit down with them while listening to Krista's interview with the Jesuit priest. See what you hear differently as you peruse these visual notes. Tell us about it.

Cardinal Philippe Barbarin of Lyon Arrives at the VaticanBy bike?!

"I love that Lyon's Cardinal rides bike to Vatican. I'd love it more if he traded briefcase for basket with baguette."

Chicago Tribune religion reporter Manya Brachear (@tribseeker) is soaking in the events of the papal conclave that is scheduled to begin this Tuesday, now that the final cardinal has arrived. Her Twitter feed is a rich flow of serious reporting and whimsical asides. She's definitely worth following.

And Ms. Brachear's tweet just might be the answer to Krista's (@kristatippett) question in response to Twitter Conversation on Fr. Greg Boyle as Popesuggestions from listeners after last week's show:

Our listeners seem insistent that Fr. Greg Boyle should be the next pope. Now how to reach the cardinals...

There was some fun to be had. Jonathan Fields (@jonathanfields) from New York City chimed in:

Wondering if the Vatican would be down with Homeboy Industries Italia. ;-)

And Cincinnati's own Todd Henry (@toddhenry) pounced on Krista's Berlusconi reference with this clever retort:

If Fr. Boyle could sway Berlusconi, it may count as his first miracle needed for sainthood.

Read the entire thread and weigh in with your playful thoughts if you like.

"Remember your name. Do not lose hope - what you seek will be found. Trust ghosts. Trust those that you have helped to help you in their turn. Trust dreams. Trust your heart and trust your story." ~Neil GaimanLooking for more inspirational words and images to buoy your weekend? Here are a couple that people shared and spread across the Internet, starting with this passage from Neil Gaiman's Instructions and Eric Vondy's stylized scene:

"Remember your name. Do not lose hope — what you seek will be found. Trust ghosts. Trust those that you have helped to help you in their turn. Trust dreams. Trust your heart and trust your story."

"I am fundamentally an optimist. Whether that comes from nature or nurture, I cannot say. Part of being optimistic is keeping one's head pointed toward the sun, one's feet moving forward." ~Nelson MandelaOr these inspiring words from Nelson Mandela:

"I am fundamentally an optimist. Whether that comes from nature or nurture, I cannot say. Part of being optimistic is keeping one's head pointed toward the sun, one's feet moving forward.

There were many dark moments when my faith in humanity was sorely tested, but I would not and could not give myself up to despair. That way lay defeat and death."

As I mentioned in last week's capsule, Krista interviewed Congressman John Lewis this past Saturday during the Congressional Civil Rights Pilgrimage in Alabama. We spoke to so many good people, witnessed so many Krista Tippett and Son Sebastian in Montgomery, Alabamaprofound moments. A few observations from Krista on the pilgrimage road:

In D.C. today. To Alabama tomorrow for Civil Rights pilgrimage. Will tweet as possible. Moved to be doing this, and with my son.

At U of AL. Just experienced sister of Vivian Malone with daughter of George Wallace, who barred Vivian and James Hood in 1963. Redemptive.

In Birmingham, Montgomery, Tuscaloosa, standing on Holy Ground. Transformative and simply not tweetable.

Worshipping at the historic Brown Chapel A.M.E. Church in Selma.Heading to Selma to retrace the march, and Betty Mae Fikes is on this bus. #humbling #amazing

This little light of mine. I'm going to let it shine. -Harry Dixon Loes

A magnificent time with @repjohnlewis on Civil Rights Pilgrimage. Mind- opening, heart-expanding. And the singing. Show to come at Easter.

"Nonviolence is confrontational. It is not silent, but creatively maladjusted to the problems and conditions of this world." John Lewis

The congregation in Selma celebrates the march with a rousing sermon by Rev. James Robinson. How many Congressional members can you identify?May we all be "creatively maladjusted" to the problems of this world. (Inspired by John Lewis and A.J. Heschel)

I'm relishing the idea that Krista's interview with Congressman Lewis will be aired on Easter weekend. It's the Easter message embodied. Look for the podcast on Thursday, March 28th!


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Sketchnotes of Kevin Kling Show+Enlarge image

Storytelling and humor are vital to Kevin Kling's survival. And his advice on the power of rhetoric, the necessity of retelling and rewriting our stories shines through in these sketchnotes on "The Losses and Laughter We Grow Into"
:

"Sometimes we need to rewrite our stories so that we can sleep at night."

Listen to the show and share your reactions to these visual notes — what we captured and didn't capture, or elements that could've been emphasized differently.

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Jacqueline and Former Student JudithPhoto of the author's mother with one of her former students. (Photo courtesy of A.E. Lefton)

"...these girls are the rightful heiresses of the bygone women who wore beautiful, heavy crowns." ~Rainer Maria Rilke

What is a woman? And what "beautiful, heavy crowns" are worn by the girls and women of today?

I have heard and read the answers — such beautiful, contradictory answers — given mostly by men. The three answers I think are closest to the truth were written by men who speak in the language of poetry and the sacred: Rainer Maria Rilke, Walt Whitman, and Teilhard de Chardin.

In Letters to a Young Poet, Rilke writes of the evolution of womankind into those "girls and women whose name will no longer signify merely an opposite of the masculine, but something in itself, something that makes one think, not of any complement and limit, but only of life and existence: the feminine human being."

Teilhard de Chardin, in his essay "The Eternal Feminine," speaks in the voice of Inspiration, the female counterpart of Creation:

"I open the door to the whole heart of creation. I, the Gateway of the Earth, the Initiation."

Similarly, in "I Sing the Body Electric" Whitman addresses women as the doorway to both physical and spiritual worlds:

Be not ashamed, women—your privilege encloses the rest, and is the exit of the rest;
You are the gates of the body, and you are the gates of the soul.

When I read these words, the pain of finding one's voice, identity, and confidence are stripped away and the essence of womanhood shines out. Yet even in these writings, which represent the very pinnacle of male descriptions of the female, there is a lack.

There is a lack because, for all its intense beauty, their prose is abstract, elevated, mystical, and not, at the same time, paired with that very particularity and red-bloodedness that gives history its long succession of "great men." Their women are the essence of life itself, yes. But they are not living.

To strike a balance between the social and political necessity of writing real women back into history, and the spiritual reality of the "feminine human being," is something I hope new generations of writers, male and female, will attempt. I believe women will hold our heads higher, despite the heaviness of our crowns, once we begin to see ourselves the way Rilke and Whitman saw us — but grounded in the good earth of our own lives.

In one sense, there is no clear answer to the question, What is a woman? Or rather, there are as many answers as there are women in the worlds of today, yesterday, and tomorrow. At the same time, I feel there is some urgency to answer this question now, or at least to provide the foundation for an answer, because of all the pretend, impossible, and dangerous "answers" media and society are offering our daughters as truth.

If we live in a fractured world, then women reflect the most broken part of it — the most vulnerable, shattered lives. At the same time, women hold the seed of unity, like a sliver of broken mirror that cannot help but reflect a whole, unbroken landscape.

I feel these twin forces at work in myself. It is as if I were both the crushed mirror lying in the street, and also the woman who leans over to see her own jagged reflection multiplied — her own identity and power multiplied because she is no longer afraid of the worst. She has experienced the worst, and though it did indeed kill her, it also sewed her back up with the waters of life thrumming deep inside her veins.

Isis and Osiris. That is what women are. We carry the burden of the old world cut into pieces inside us. And yet we are healers — self-healers too. Lizards who can sever their own limbs, and starfish who can grow new ones.

And I only allow myself to speak in the same abstract, elevated, slightly mystical manner as the three great men I mentioned earlier for one reason, which is this:

If you ask me, I can tell you, in as much detail as you need, exactly and specifically:
how I carried the broken world,
how it killed me,
and how I am learning — slowly, halting —
to sing myself back to life.

For my mother, Jacqueline Táhirih Lefton, 1951—2010


A.E. LeftonA.E. Lefton is a poet, journalist, and educator currently living in Budapest, Hungary. She is a programs manager at the Romedia Foundation, which works to change perceptions of Europe's Roma people through film, advocacy, and education. You can read more of her thoughts on education and social justice on her blog FireWired.


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If you could stand in someone else's shoes... Hear what they hear. See what they see. Feel what they feel. Would you treat them differently?

These words end this incredibly beautiful video produced by the Cleveland Clinic, a nonprofit medical center that integrates clinical and hospital care with research and education. We spend quite a bit of effort here at On Being focusing on the sound of the human voice and how each guest adds to our collective discussion. We attempt to draw out the best of their stories and experiences in all its messiness and glory. This video speaks to each person's complexity, the stories that go unsaid but float just beneath the surface.

Titled "Empathy," this video was presented by the health care organization's CEO Toby Cosgrove at his annual State of the Clinic address on February 27, 2013. And it gets at a point that immunologist Esther Sternberg explores in her work and personal life: how new knowledge about the physical spaces of our lives can stress us, make us sick, or help us be well and connect with others.

For so many years, our hospitals and clinics were sterile, perfunctory structures that ignored the humanity of its patients and focused on the programmatic structure of its spaces. Ms. Sternberg explains:

"Hospitals are built like mazes because typically you have the old original small hospital building and then they keep adding wings to it, which hospitals until recently were designed really to optimize the diagnostic tools, you know, the X-ray equipment and the blood-drawing and so on rather than the human being that's going to be in that building. Airports too. Just think about an airport."

Folks like John Cary of Public Interest Design and others are at the forefront of a burgeoning field focusing on human-centered design. And, the nonprofit organization The Center for Health Design launched an initiative in 2000 called the Pebble Project, which uses an evidence-based design approach to "better understand the implications of the built environment on healthcare outcomes." They're learning how the built environment can affect everything from medication errors at cancer institutes to the efficacy rates of recovery with acuity-adaptable rooms (staying in the same room for admission to discharge) to the way caregivers work. They're not only collaborating with healthcare providers and medical industry partners, they're also drawing from the expertise of architects and design firms such as Herman Miller.

In the end, it's about human connection. When we relate to those around us by understanding their back stories and their circumstances, we improve the way we work, the way we live, the way we take care of one another, the way we relate going forward and, as Martin Luther King Jr. would say, building the "beloved community" that edifies us all.

TobyMac at Winter Wonder SlamFans watch TobyMac perform live at Winter Wonder Slam. (Photo by Susan Lloyd / Flickr, cc by nc-sa 2.0)

Commenting on "Christian Pop," if one is not at home in it, is precarious and will doubtless reveal how out of it the commentator is. So I wander in with a sense of mission. If "public religion" is the field of our notice, overlooking "trendy hip-hop, dubstep, funk, and synch pop beats" would be to miss some very public expressions. Allison Stewart pointed to the music styles just mentioned when commenting on rapper TobyMac, whose album "Eye On It" was only the third "Christian" product ever to have debuted as No. 1 on Billboard's "top ten" charts.

Stewart, in an interview: "The lines between Christian and secular music are so porous now—do you think the distinction even matters?" Answer: "I think the walls are coming down between genres of music in general, and especially Christian music."

The rapper's responses are cogent, modest, and to the point, as he delineates lines between the "vulgar" and "clean versions." I won't pursue this further, lest my ignorance and unfamiliarity be paraded vulgarly. We move on now to comment on the "porous" lines between Christian and secular music or most anything else in the arts line.

I was drawn to this topic while researching for a forthcoming lecture before Chicago Chorale's March 24 Passion According to Saint John by Bach. Whenever I am called, or freed, to wander in the fields of Chicago Choraleclassical sacred music, I find that sooner or later — usually sooner, now — the subject of how "Christian and secular music" inter-relate comes up.

I've been hearing Bach for over 80 years, having been child sat near my father's organ bench while mother was in the small town church choir. And I've been reading musicologists, theologians, and other Bach scholars for three fourths of those years, again and again pondering the lines and distinctions. Sections and strains from Bach's sacred cantatas can sound much like his Coffee Cantata and its kin, until one hears the words. What makes the music religious, Christian, or sacred, and what is "secular?"

Rather than deal with such questions musicologically, I'll turn in the few lines ahead to the questions of esthetics-politics-and-culture. Try as I might, I can't be moved by hip-hop, dubstep, funk, and synth pop beats labeled Christian. And I have to admit that my kind doesn't even try very hard. Yet as in so many areas, the porousness of the line between Christian or religious and secular is welcomed. True confession: of course, sacred and secular lines are blurred or sounds blended in the fields of folk music, and many of us classics-lovers are at home with it, as are composers of choice. A step further: Where is the line between Christian and secular in jazz, and should we worry about it? I am in the company of those, dwarfed by Christian pop adherents, who cherish jazz by Mary Lou Williams, Dave Brubeck, or close-to-home-and-almost-in-the family Andy Tecson, who for years have rendered the old line porous.

What many of us are learning is that some of the choices are simply matters of taste, however rationalized. And those of us who pay attention to how religion or specific faiths like the Christian might best be furthered, fostered, and delighted in musically are learning tolerance. But, wait a minute: what's that I hear? Bach! A-a-a-a-a-a-h.


Martin MartyMartin E. Marty is the Fairfax M. Cone Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus at The University of Chicago. He’s the author of many books, including Pilgrims in Their Own Land and Modern American Religion.

This essay is reprinted from Sightings from the Martin Marty Center at the University of Chicago Divinity School.

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Sketchnotes of Fr. Greg Boyle's Interview with Krista Tippett+Enlarge image

Remember Casey Kasem's line: "Keep your feet on the ground and keep reaching for the stars." Father Greg Boyle does just that. He's one of those amazing Jesuits who lives a life of the mind, then uses his moral imagination, and then puts these ideas into action. A priest well-known in certain circles for his gang intervention programs in Los Angeles, Fr. Boyle talks about things like kinship and service in the fullest sense — that we are all brothers and sisters who teach and learn from each other. As a Christian, he says the point of service is about finding kinship and “our common calling to delight in one another.”

Doug Neill's sketchnotes pick up on this idea in our podcast of "The Calling of Delight":

"The day will never come when I am as holy as the people I serve."

I'd ask you to sit down with these sketchnotes while listening to this show. See what you hear differently as you peruse these visual notes. Tell us what you thought we didn't capture or could've emphasized differently.

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Funeral for LA officers slain by Chris DornerRiverside police officers embrace following the committal ceremony of officer Michael Crain at Riverside National Cemetery on February 13, 2013 in Riverside, California. Officer Crain was allegedly killed by ex LAPD officer Chris Dorner on February 7, 2013. (Photo by Jonathan Alcorn/Getty Images)

In the wake of former LAPD officer Christopher Dorner's recent crimes, media attention to his manifesto, "Last Resort," has focused on Mr. Dorner's description of racism within that police department and on the disturbing madness of his comments. While "racism" and "rambling" are words often tagged to his manifesto, religion, too, is present here, offering an essential vocabulary for Mr. Dorner's justifications of his crimes.

"I lived a good life and though not a religious man I always stuck to my own personal code of ethics, ethos and always stuck to my shoreline and true North," he writes. While "No one grows up and wants to be a cop killer," Mr. Dorner insists that his experiences as a police officer viscerally and intuitively "disgusted" him. "I saw some of the most vile things humans can inflict on others" he says of his fellow LAPD officers, people whom he calls "dirtbags" for their gallows humor at crime scenes, or for equating overtime pay with their presence at such scenes. Mr. Dorner argues that no one needs an articulated system of ethics to know that such actions are wrong. Yet Mr. Dorner also mentions Christianity, even while denying association with the religion himself. "I'm not a ... Christian," he writes, though even "that old book, made of fiction and limited non-fiction, called the Bible," can be held up as a model of ethics. At the very least, it cannot be used, Mr. Dorner argues, to justify racist behavior.

Mr. Dorner's stance on Christianity (rejection of the institutional church, its theology and history, coupled with respect for a basic ethical teaching advanced by Jesus) parallels stances in two popular African American religious movements, the Moorish Science Temple and the Nation of Islam. As a city cop, Mr. Dorner would surely have been exposed to these religions. A reference in his manifesto to the pun between "Justice" and "Just us" (also popular in Moorish Science and Nation of Islam circles where the pun has specific religious meanings, notably as a secret teaching regarding Jesus and the nature of salvation) stands as evidence of such religious influence. Like Mr. Dorner, Moors reject the hypocrisy of Christianity but hold that Jesus was himself a dark-skinned Moor and that his gospel was offered as a redeeming ethical message for the pale-faced "European" nations. Along similar lines, Nation of Islam leader Elijah Muhammad portrayed Jesus as an Islamic ethical thinker when he composed his own gospel.

Moorish Science Temple of America
Photo of Moorish Science Temple by TheeErin / Flickr, cc by-nd 2.0

Mr. Dorner also shares, with these two religions, a strong sense of the importance of one's name. The Nation of Islam rejects "slave names" while, for Moors, "the name means everything" and declaring one's correct name leads to benefits both political and metaphysical. "Name" is a central concept in Mr. Dorner's manifesto. To justify his rampage, he claims that he was driven by an ethical desire to "clear" his "name." "A man is nothing without his name," he declares, highlighting the connection between his desire to redeem his reputation and his history of enduring "racial derogatory terms spoken to me." When, as a child, he first experiences racism, his "response was swift;" he immediately punched and kicked a fellow student in the elementary schoolyard. This was the first in a long string of attempts "at obtaining my name back," leading to military service and appeals via internal review boards and the courts.

Yet Mr. Dorner doesn't use "name" only as a synonym for reputation; his rhetoric of naming is also a rhetoric of blood. Mr. Dorner wants a "name" untainted by racism and in keeping with what he insists is his blood inheritance of upstanding, ethical knowledge, and behavior. This notion has religious resonance as well. The sense that ancestry equals destiny and names affect one's recognition of that ancestry and destiny is also central to Moorish Science and nation of Islam.

The rationalizations passing off fury as "righteous" and the conceptualizations and categorizations that demarcate a worldview: these are the basic data of the study of religion. In the Mr. Dorner case we see a man advancing arguments for an inherited ethical sense "in my DNA," insisting on the value and importance of "name" in the face of a racist society, and arguing that his murderous acts should be remembered as a morally-justified attempt to restore balance to a corrupt police department. These claims, however horrifying their results, deserve careful consideration and contextualization. Christopher Dorner did not come to his worldview in a vacuum. He borrowed from, and relied upon, themes and concepts from religion in order to explain his motivations.


Spencer Dew, author for SightingsSpencer Dew is Assistant Professor of Religious Studies and Broyles Research Chair at Centenary College of Louisiana as well as an instructor in the BA program of the Chicago Police Department. He is completing a book on the origins of the Moorish Science Temple of America.

This essay is reprinted with permission of Sightings from the Martin Marty Center at the University of Chicago Divinity School.

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Padre Sisyphus Garcia of Templo Santa MuertePadre Sisyphus Garcia of Templo Santa Muerte tends his shop on Melrose Avenue in Los Angeles. (All photos by Shweta Saraswat)

Her sightless eyes, bony face, and glinting scythe preside over narcotics headquarters large and small. Law enforcement officials in Mexico and the U.S. know her well — she’s a regular at drug busts on both sides of the border.

She is Santa Muerte, the "Saint of Death," and her popularity outside of the drug world is growing. A folk saint condemned by the Roman Catholic Church, Santa Muerte is inspiring a diverse following in the U.S. Latino community that has become disenchanted with the Church, a following that could be the key to reshaping her notorious identity.

An image born of European ideas intermingling with the Aztec spiritual pantheon, Santa Muerte is “new age Grim Reaper-type goddess, a bad-girl counterpart to the Virgin of Guadalupe,” according to the FBI's Behavioral Science Unit. Most commonly depicted with a globe in one hand and a scythe in the other, she is considered a nonjudgmental — even amoral — angel of unique efficacy and speed in bringing about miracles.

“If you have faith in her, she will grant you wishes,” says Padre Sisyphus Garcia, founder and pastor of Templo Santa Muerte in Los Angeles. “Not what you want, but what you need.”

Signage for Templo Santa Muerte in Los AngelesThe Templo, a modest one-room establishment on Melrose Avenue with an attached bótanica, sells all manner of candles, amulets, rosaries, and spell books for those wishing to test Santa Muerte’s powers. It is one of many sites dedicated to the saint that have cropped up in the last few decades.

According to Andrew Chesnut, a professor of religious studies and author of Devoted to Death: Santa Muerte, the Skeleton Saint, more than five million Mexicans worship the saint, and that number is growing. Charting exact numbers in this area is difficult, he writes, because some devotees worship in secret out of fear of being condemned by the Church.

But a large number of the regulars at Templo Santa Muerte are what Padre Garcia calls “born Catholics,” people who were raised Catholic but have become disillusioned with the Church.

Santa Muerte Figurines in the Botanica of Templo Santa Muerte in Los Angeles“Most of the devotees here, they had experience with the Catholic Church and said they don’t want to go there anymore,” said Mr. Garcia, a born Catholic himself. “They are questioning. Like with the pope thing [the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI] — you’re an emissary of God, and all of the sudden you don’t want to work for him anymore? No, no, there’s something going on.”

Mr. Garcia says the growing number of Santa Muerte devotees look to the “Bony Lady” for help with everything varying from illness and disease to relationships and money. With that comes the rare incidents of the macabre on the extreme fringe of the devotee community that soil the saint’s reputation. Human remains have been found this year in homes in Oxnard and Pasadena as part of altars to the saint, and eight men were arrested in northern Mexico last year for allegedly killing two boys and a woman as part of a ritualistic offering to Santa Muerte.

Incense Burns at the Door of the Botanica of Templo Santa Muerte in Los AngelesStill, the strongest contributing factor to the stigma against the folk saint is her constant association with drug traffickers and the dark spirituality of narcocultura, or drug culture. With the high stakes of the drug trade, the offerings by cartel members to Santa Muerte can surpass the normal tokens of food and drink, and dip into the realm of human sacrifice.

Though Mr. Chesnut’s research has found a comparable, though less violent, level of veneration of the saint among law enforcement officials themselves, the Drug Enforcement Agency confirms that educating officers about Santa Muerte is indeed a relevant part of training.

Votive Candles of Santa Muerte in the Botanica of Templo Santa Muerte in Los Angeles“Here in L.A. you become very much aware of it as soon as you start working in investigations,” says Sarah Pullen, Public Information Officer for the Los Angeles DEA division. “Investigators know about it, and it’s covered in a number of continuing education classes.”

Last year the National Latino Peace Officers Association even hosted a special seminar for law enforcement officers from across the country to learn about Santa Muerte. Part of such education involves realizing that the saint is not canonized and not recognized by the Roman Catholic Church. Rather, she is an unofficial folk saint whose congregation is presided over by self-proclaimed priests and bishops.

One such high priest is David Romo, founder of the first Santa Muerte church in Mexico. He was imprisoned in 2011 for being part of a kidnapping ring. Couple that with the Mexican government’s official denunciation of Santa Muerte, the destruction of Santa Muerte shrines by the Mexican army, and the saint’s unshakable presence in countless prison cells in Mexico and the U.S., Santa Muerte’s future seems dark. But according to Mr. Garcia, those with need and faith will continue to see her value beyond the stereotype of narcocultura.

“Some temples of Santa Muerte work on the dark side, yes” Mr. Garcia says. “Santa Muerte works everywhere. That’s why people get confused. She’s a being of light. She is a shield to those with faith.”


Shweta SaraswatShweta Saraswat is a multimedia journalist and Annenberg Fellow at the Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism at USC. She currently works as supervising producer of the newsmagazine show Impact.


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