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Rather than proclaiming “peace on Earth” this holiday season, self-proclaimed spokesperson for God Jerry Falwell, is launching a holy war.

The Rev. Falwell writes at www.falwell.com, “I am calling on pastors, churches and individuals to join Liberty Counsel’s ‘Friend or Foe Christmas Campaign.’ We need to draw a line in the sand and resist bullying tactics by the American Civil Liberties Union, Americans United for the Separation of Church and State, the American Atheists and other leftist organizations that intimidate school and government officials by spreading misinformation about Christmas. Celebrating Christmas is constitutional!”
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THE MAN WITH THE 7 SECOND MEMORY

“Clive Wearing has one of the worst cases of amnesia in the world. Once a renowned conductor and musician, Clive was struck down in 1985 byEncephalitis, which caused massive damage to his brain.

Doctors battled to save his life but he was left with a memory that spans just seven seconds. “It’s like being dead . . . one long night with no thoughts, no dreams. There’s no difference between day and night, I haven’t been conscious in 20 years.”

The only person Clive recognizes is his wife, Deborah, who had been married to him just 18 months when he became ill. The illness has meant they have had to spend the last 20 years of their marriage living apart.

The Man with the 7 Second Memory tells the touching story of Clive and Deborah’s lives and how their marriage has survived against the odds. The moving film visits Clive, now 67, in the brain injury unit where he lives under constant supervision. He tells producer, Jane Treays, that she and the camera crew are the first people he has seen in 20 years.

The Man with the 7 Second Memory is produced and directed by award winning British filmmaker Jane Treays.”

CBC: The Passionate Eye – THE MAN WITH THE 7 SECOND MEMORY

Hampton Union Currents: Practicing Wiccan says Harry Potter series is not about religion

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By Liz Chretien

So what does a practicing Wiccan have to say about all the stereotyping, assumptions and criticisms?

“It’s very sad that people have such polarized views about this series,” says Maria Kay Simms, a Kensington resident, Wiccan high priestess, and Harry Potter fan who has been practicing Wicca since 1987. “These people are confusing a Halloween secular idea with a spiritual path that has nothing to do with it.”

Simms says she reads about opposition every time a new book or movie comes out. “A lot of the objectors are fundamentalist Christians who don’t understand what they are objecting to.”

Simms, also an astrologer and published author, began her study of Wicca with the Covenant of the Goddess Group in San Diego in 1987 after experimenting with many different spiritual paths, including Catholicism. She prefers to keep a low profile with her beliefs here in New Hampshire, largely because of some of the criticisms Wiccans draw from those who, she says, are uneducated or closed-minded.

“It’s very inaccurate, first to compare Wiccans to the characters in Harry Potter, and secondly to say that the books teach Wicca to children,” she says. “It is sad that people let their ignorance of what they think they are against be directed at this series when the correlation clearly isn’t there.”

The fact that the books mainly take place in Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry brings a “knee-jerk reaction” from protesters, according to Simms. But she notes that Halloween is never mentioned anywhere in the book, while the students celebrate Christmas each year.

“People make a big issue about Halloween, but the secular customs of most holidays are pagan,” Simms says, adding that Wiccans celebrate Samhein (pronounced Sow-wen) around the time of Halloween to honor those who have passed over and the end of the earth cycle.

Simms says there is no religion anywhere in the Harry Potter series. “No one should fear kids reading these books,” she says. “There is no religion apparent in the book at all, no mention of the god or goddess, and nothing in the Muggle (non-witch) community regarding Christianity either. The books do have a very magical quality about them, however, as it is a series that induced a lot of children to read in an electronic generation.”

Simms adds that she reads all the books and takes her grandchildren to see the movies when they are released. “I don’t believe (author) J.K. Rowling had any deliberate motivation about what she did in these books. She has a wonderful way with words, and I was so impressed with the books from the first one on, even before the description of Hogwarts,” she says. “I suspect those who complain haven’t even read the books and are just reacting to the idea.”

Simms says she believes that parents worrying about their children looking to another religion should first look to their own practices. “A lot of times, kids turning to other religions is not about an attraction but a discomfort or dissatisfaction of the religion they’re in,” she says. “In the case of the books, parents should not withhold that privilege from them. Reading Harry Potter wouldn’t discourage kids from the religion their parents are teaching them.”

Still, a feeling of disappointment resonates with Simms over the controversy. “I don’t feel anger when I hear the comparisons, I just think it’s regrettable that some deprive their kids of reading inspirational writing. I imagine things like this encourage creativity, and this is a time when creativity is needed in kids.”

Simms says she fully intends to see “Goblet of Fire” when it is released, and she plans to take her grandchildren. “I’ve seen the evidence of positive influence these stories have had on my granddaughter,” she says. “I urge parents to read the books themselves so they can see if there is any religion. But these books will be classics. I don’t volunteer to argue with people, but I would try to convince them that there is nothing to worry about in ‘Harry Potter.’”

Hampton Union Currents: Practicing Wiccan says Harry Potter series is not about religion