This topic could not be timelier. On March 25, 2019 a Christian
Pennsylvania
Lawmaker, Republican Stephanie Borowicz from Clinton County,
conducted the
opening prayer in the Pennsylvania House. The prayer immediately
preceded an induction ceremony involving the first Muslim Woman, Movita
Johnson-Harrell, to be sworn into the Commonwealth Legislature. The
prayer made no attempt to be ecumenical and was rife with religious references
that were decidedly anti Muslim. Many of those in attendance
believed the prayer was a political statement against the Muslim faith.
In considering religious discrimination, it is instructive to
consider how Protestant Americans received Catholics and Mormons as their
numbers grew throughout the 19th century. For American nativists
and populists in the pre- Civil War period, the surge of Catholic European
immigrants and the new Mormon religion created deep anxiety. This
anti-Catholic/Mormon movement coalesced into a major political entity, The
American Party, commonly known as the Know-Nothing movement.
The Know Nothings
believed a “Romanist” conspiracy was afoot to subvert civil and religious
liberty in the United States. They sought to politically organize native-born
Protestants (many of whom were second-generation immigrants themselves) in
what they described as a defense of Protestant religious and political values.
There were expressed fears by Know-Nothing leaders that Catholic priests and
bishops would control a large bloc of voters and pass laws against the interests
of Protestant America.
These claims should sound familiar to those
who follow Donald Trump’s tweets and the policies of his
Administration. ‘Make America Great Again” is supported by a strong
anti-Muslim component. It views Muslim immigration with the same contempt
as Catholic immigrants and the new Mormon religion faced 150 years ago.
Rather than encourage Muslim assimilation into
American culture Trump and many of his followers seek to simply keep them out
of the country. With no evidence to support the claim, they believe that the
tenants of Islam and Shira law are designed to defeat democracy and the rule of
law. (Ironically, Trump’s words and actions often appear to do the
same) The major distinction between “then” and “now” is that while
Catholicism went on to become the nation’s single largest religious group and
there are now seven million Mormons the number of American citizens who are
devout Muslims is relatively small.
A recent article in the New York Review of
Books (The Popery Panic, David S. Reynolds, April 18, 2019) reviews the
historical literature concerning the backlash against Catholic
immigration. By 1854, the American Party had over one million
followers. Similar to today’s Tea Party, the No Nothings at their pinnacle
elected several governors, hundreds of state legislators, and the Mayors of
Boston, Chicago and Philadelphia. Political riots and deaths were common.
Fake News to attack the surge in Catholicism
and Mormonism was prevalent. Nativist newspapers included the
following: The American Protestant Vindicator, Priestcraft
Unmasked, The Anti-Romanist, and The Downfall of
Babylon; or The Triumph of Truth Over Popery. Best selling books of the day
were: The Escaped Nun, The Female Jesuit, Priests’
Prisons for Women, The Captive Nun, The Haunted Convent, The
Convent’s Doom, and The White Nun of the Wilderness.
Anti Mormon Literature
included: The Mormoness; or, The Trials of Mary Maverick, The
Prophets; or, Mormonism Unveiled, Wife No. 19; or, The Story of a
Life in Bondage, Being a Complete Exposé of Mormonism, and the
inevitable Awful Disclosures of Mormonism. Sexual bondage,
infanticide, and the miseries of plural marriage were common topics in them.
One novel, Mormon Wives, sold more than 40,000 copies in the 1850s.
By 1900, over fifty anti-Mormon books were in print.
The question posed by history
is always: do we learn from the past, or are we destined to repeat the past?
Both Catholics and Mormons are today mainstream accepted contributors to the
health and vitality of our nation. Both religious groups are prominent
participants in industry, education and politics. It is impossible to discuss
our heritage without including them.
Learning from the past would lead us to a
rational and moderate national policy regarding Muslim immigration and the
welcoming of those of the Islamic faith into American culture. Unfortunately,
we seem ready to take the other, darker road by repeating past discrimination.
As I finish this commentary, POLITICO reports
that Trump is considering the nomination of, Julie Kirchner, the former head of
an anti immigration group to head U.S. Citizenship and Immigration
Services. Her prior organization, the Federation for American
Immigration Reform (FAIR), has ties to white supremacist groups and
has made many racist statements. Its advertisements have often been rejected
because of racist content. Its expressed policy is that America remain a
majority white population by limiting the number of non-whites who enter the
country.
Because the White House
is encouraging modern nativism, it is more dangerous than the Know Nothing
movement. Religious and racial discrimination is becoming
institutionalized at the highest level of government. It is time for
all concerned citizens to speak up and support religious equality for Muslim
immigrants and Muslim citizens alike.
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