The United States Air Force Academy (USAFA) has announced in a recent press release its plans to create an area of worship open to pagans. According to the news release on January 26, the Colorado Springs-based Air Force Academy will be establishing a special area for earth-based religious worship including Druidism and Wicca.
The academy intends to dedicate a hilltop area on March 10th of this year; a stone circle will be created for the use of outdoor worship, and the area will be open to air force service members, cadets, and the inhabitants of the area. At this time, Muslims, Buddhists, Catholics, and Protestants have a special worship area at the academy. This news comes following air force guidelines established in 2005 to accommodate more religious belief systems.
The Air Force Academy chapel will add a worship area for followers of Earth-centered religions during a dedication ceremony, which is tentatively scheduled to be held at the circle March 10. The circle is a circle of stones that is positioned overlooking the USAFA’s Visitor Center and the Cadet Chapel. This new area of worship has been established by Tech. Sgt. Brandon Longcrier who is in charge of the Academy’s Astronautic laboratories. Longcrier worked along with the existing chapel at the USAFA in order to establish the place of worship.
Longcrier states: “Feel free to check the site out, but treat it as you would any other religious structure.”
The stones that have been used to construct the inner and outer rings of the sacred circle were at one time positioned by the Visitor Center. Viewed as a safety hazard, the stones were purposefully moved to the hilltop by the 10th Civil Engineer Squadron. According to the press release, the chaplains at the USAFA have been very supportive about the creation of the sacred space at the Academy.
Sergeant Longcrier became a pagan shortly after arriving at the USAFA in the year 2006 and he feels that the tolerance for other religions on the base has improved tremendously since his arrival. In 2005, allegations surfaced that suggested the Academy had illustrated religious intolerance. In 2006, air force cadets that had earth-based religions had no place of worship and nowhere to gather. Now they are meeting each Monday, they have the opportunity to go on retreats, and they have a stone circle erected where they can worship.
A circle of worship was also established in 1999 by the Sacred Well Congregation (SWC) at Fort Hood in Texas too. Unfortunately, since that time, the circle was vandalized four times. The worst vandalism occurred in October of 2000 when a large limestone altar was destroyed. One member of the SWC, in response to the act of vandalism wrote the following words: “If we speak together, we are a chorus to be heard. If we whisper alone, we are but a sigh in the dead of night.”
Blessed be.
You can read the US Air Force Academy Press Release for more information.
http://www.usafa.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123187157