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Air Force Academy canceled controversial evangelical speaker
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evangelical Christian who compared President Barack Obama to Hitler was
scheduled to speak at the Air Force
Academy during a February conference, but the academy canceled her appearance after
getting major push back from several advocacy groups.
The
speaker, a former Nazi youth leader named Maria Anne Hirschmann, is
controversial for her comments on Obama and for writings in one of her books
that suggested Jews need to stop complaining about the Holocaust and forgive the
Germans.
"We
believe very strongly that everyone has the right to their own faith and
perspective, but this was highly political," Elizabeth Sholes said of the
academy's booking of Hirschmann.
Sholes,
director of public policy for the California Council of Churches/California
Church IMPACT, also said that conference attendance for cadets was mandatory,
which breaches the First Amendment right to be free from religious
proselytizing by the government.
Meade
Warthen, the academy's chief of media relations, confirmed Friday that
Hirschmann was scheduled to speak but says that she "withdrew." Warthen says he did
not know how Hirschmann got on the speaker list.
The
academy did not return phone calls for further
comment.
The
flack over Hirschmann comes in the wake of allegations for several years that
the academy and other U.S. military institutions show
favoritism toward evangelical Christian military personnel, and discriminate
against nonevangelical Christians and those following other faiths.
U.S.
military institutions have also been accused of characterizing the war on terror
as a holy war between Christianity and Islam.
Since
2005, the Air Force Academy officials have said they've made efforts to curb Christian proselytizing and
respect all cadets' religious beliefs; last year, the academy opened a Tibetan
Buddhist temple on campus.
But
there have been missteps. In February 2008, cadets attended a school-sponsored
panel discussion of so-called former Islamic terrorists praising Christianity
and ridiculing Islam. Criticism was so strong that in April 2008 the academy
sponsored a second panel discussion, "USA's War on Terror: Not a Battle Between
Christianity and Islam," which featured three critics of the U.S.
military's alleged marrying of evangelical Christianity and military
action.
In
April, 2008, reporter Jeff Sharlet visited the academy to do research for his
article "Jesus Killed Mohammed: The Crusade for a Christian Military," appearing
in Harper's magazine's May issue, expected to hit newsstands Tuesday.
Sharlet
writes that Christian proselytizing remains a problem at the academy. "But it's
not so much a conspiracy as it cluelessness," Sharlet said Thursday. "There are
plenty of people trying to do the right thing, but they really aren't paying
attention to what is going on."
Academy
officials had no comment Friday on the Harper's
article.
Maria
Anne Hirshmann was scheduled to talk at the academy's February "2009 National
Character and Leadership Symposium," which included nearly 40 speakers. The
symposium's theme was "Answering the Nation's Call ... Our Legacy in the
Making."
Hirshmann,
who is in her 80s, is the founder of Hansi Ministries -- "Hansi" being an
acronym for Help America to New Spirit and Insight. The Czech native is a former Nazi youth
leader who converted to Christianity, according to her biography posted on the
academy Web site prior to the symposium.
In
her November 2008 newsletter, which she posted on her Web site,
hansiministries.org, Hirshmann says Obama, like Hitler, is "a charismatic leader
who promises full pocketbooks." Obama's pro-choice stands, she writes, resembles
those of Hitler, who "brought abortion to a systematic level and declared the
killing of unborn babies a national duty."
She
is author of the 1980 book "Hansi, the Girl Who Left the Swastika," writing that
Jews need to let go of their hate over the
Holocaust.
Hirshmann did not return several e-mails sent Friday for comment.
Sholes'
organization protested the speaker choice because of the "big deal" the academy
made in advertising her talk and because it made "attendance a high pressure
issue," Sholes said. She also took into consideration, she said, the academy's
poor record on First Amendment issues.
"Booking
her was not faith, it was politics," Sholes said.






