It�s that time of year again. Outside the shopping malls and
supermarkets we encounter the bell-ringing representatives of the Salvation
Army, dressed in paramilitary uniforms, with their big red kettles, begging for
a share of our holiday dollars.
And, as I do every year, I will ignore them.
Not because I am selfish or stingy. In the past few weeks, I
have contributed a healthy sum in end-of-year donations to the non-profit
agencies that I choose to support.
But I choose not to support the Salvation Army.
My reasons? Read on.
First let me say that the Salvation Army has done some good
work in the past in providing assistance to the poor, the addicted, and the
marginalized.
But their methods are not ones that I approve of. The
Salvation Army has a long and disturbing history of religious coercion, abuse,
and intolerance.
I have spoken with a number of people who have sought
assistance from the Salvation Army in the past, particularly for disaster
relief. I was told of how these people were preached to and forced into praying
with the Salvation Army folks to their Christian God as a prerequisite for
receiving services. If you�re Jewish, tough. If you�re Hindu, tough. Gotta pray
their way, to their God, or else you�re not worthy of assistance. It�s quid pro
quo. Gotta take advantage of people when they�re most vulnerable. Contrast this
with the secular Red Cross, which just wants to help disaster victims, not save
their souls. (In the interest of full disclosure, I personally received help
from the Red Cross when my apartment building burned down in 2001. They were
extremely helpful and compassionate, and expected nothing in return.)
As if the religious coercion isn�t enough, the Salvation
Army has also been implicated in a number of cases of alleged sexual abuse,
ranging from molestation of child members of the Salvation Army�s Red Shield
swim team in Seattle to pedophile rings that operated out of Salvation Army run
orphanages in Australia and New Zealand. (Yes, they like to �spread the love�
worldwide.)
The Salvation Army is also homophobic -- so much so that
they would stop helping the poor if it meant they had to respect equal rights
for gays and lesbians. In 2004, they threatened to close their soup kitchens in
New York City rather than comply with the city�s legislation requiring firms to
offer domestic partnership benefits to gay employees.
Another fact that many people are likely unaware of is that
the Salvation Army is technically a church as well as an openly Christian
charity. As such, they are certainly entitled to promote their church�s dogma
and operate their organization accordingly.
But I will not support it with my hard-earned money,
especially given the organization�s disturbing history, coercive methods, and
unChristianlike intolerance.
So please think twice before tossing your spare change into
their red kettle of trouble. Do you really want to support this with your
hard-earned cash?
Mary Shaw is a Philadelphia-based writer and
activist, with a focus on politics, human rights, and social justice. She is a
former Philadelphia Area Coordinator for the Nobel-Prize-winning human rights
group Amnesty International, and her views appear regularly in a variety of
newspapers, magazines, and websites. Note that the ideas expressed here are the
author�s own, and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Amnesty
International or any other organization with which she may be associated.
E-mail: mary@maryshawonline.com.