Pubdate: Mon, 28 Feb 2011 Source: Hamilton Spectator (CN ON) Copyright: 2011 The Hamilton Spectator Contact: http://www.thespec.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/181 Author: Aidan Johnson, Hamilton community activist working in corporate litigation at a national law firm. THE FREEDOM OF 'ABSURD' BELIEFS Church of the Universe Loses on Pot Laws but Wins Big for Religious Diversity In 1969, heavenly winds connected the Hamilton area and Woodstock: It was the year of both the great '60s music festival and the founding of the Church of the Universe. The Church was started by Walter Tucker near Fletcher Creek Lake, better known as Clearwater Abbey, in Puslinch. Walter set out to teach a religion with two principles: First, that marijuana connects humanity to God; and second, that we should not harm one another. The hippie values of Woodstock resonate in the message. Today, the Church of the Universe is a bona fide Hamilton institution. Walter and his colleague Michael Baldasaro are area celebrities. Baldasaro ran for mayor -- and not for the first time -- in 2010. Fellow candidate Bob Bratina, now mayor, praised Baldasaro at the height of the campaign for bringing colour to the race, and for being a genuine Hamilton character. But the Church's trajectory has not been all good vibes. This month, the Ontario Superior Court of Justice ruled that freedom of religion does not give the Church of the Universe any right to traffic in marijuana. The case, heard in Toronto, is entitled "R. v. Kharaghani," in recognition of having been initiated by Church members Shahrooz Kharaghani and Peter Styrsky. Justice Thea Herman wrote the decision. Basically, Justice Herman held that limits need to be imposed on religious liberty. "Freedom of conscience and religion" is guaranteed to every Canadian by section 2(a) of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. The Charter, in turn, is the cornerstone of the Constitution of Canada. Its provisions need to be taken seriously. When a court decides to violate a person's Charter rights, that is a very big deal, from the perspective of politics as well as from the perspective of law. Justice Herman knows this very well. Indeed, she goes out of her way in the decision to give a full hearing to the claim of Church of the Universe members that they belong to an actual faith. In figuring out what exactly counts as a "religion" for the purposes of constitutional law, Herman considers "religions such as Quakerism, Unitarian Universalism and Zen Buddhism ... that focus more on the individual's experiences and less on institutional structures." The judge does not go so far as to say that Walter and company are exactly like the Quakers. She acknowledges that many reasonable people will find the theology of the Church of the Universe "absurd." But that very seeming "absurdity" in the Church becomes Herman's jumping-off point for some remarkable thoughts on freedom: "(W)hile many may view the beliefs of the applicants and other members of the Church of the Universe as absurd, that is not and cannot be the test of whether the beliefs of members of that Church qualify as a religion." This statement might seem bad. The Supreme Court of British Columbia is right now deciding whether religious freedom gives a right to polygamy -- the practice of taking multiple wives, many of them (in terms of how polygamy actually works) brainwashed into awful submission. Some fundamentalist Muslims in Canada have requested an exemption for their school-age children from music class. In response, mainstream Muslims observe that music is a time-honoured Islamic path to Allah. But the fundamentalists insist. To those with reservations about legalized polygamy and a spread of such other extremist ways, Justice Herman's "big tent" approach might sound a scary note. Giving Walter's brethren the right to smoke up would have consequences well beyond Canadian drug policy. The good news is that the judge sees clearly that respect for religious diversity needs to be combined with respect for rule of law. In the case of the Church of the Universe, she says, the law of religious freedom needs to be balanced with the law for the regulation of contraband substances. She does not touch the very open question of whether our pot laws make sense. Instead, she rightly leaves that to the democratic process, beyond the court. It is not clear to Herman that the Church needs to traffic in pot in order to have freedom of religion. The law on occasion draws lines. As a Catholic, I see the Church of the Universe as foreign. But I am glad the court says that the sincerity of Church members cannot be impugned because their beliefs seem, to most of us, absurd. Instead of going that way, Justice Herman based her evaluation of sincerity on evidence and Church member testimony -- almost literally, looking the supposed believer in the eye. That seems a fair way to go. The personal, interior search for morality and truth deserves protection. We can stop the searchers from acting as unelected legislators, bending and changing the law because their interpretation of God demands it, while at the same time showing them respect. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.