Pagans In
The Workplace:
A Guide For Managers
and Human Resource
Directors
by
Cecylyna
Dewr
An employee at your company
practices a religion with which you may not be familiar. This leaflet is
simply to give you information you may need to understand the different
experiences this employee may share with you, and answer any questions you
might have.
What is a Pagan employee
likely to practice and believe?
Because Pagans generally follow
a non-credal, non-dogmatic spirituality, there may be even more variants
between Pagan religious beliefs than there are between denominations of
Christianity.
The most commonly practiced
types of Paganism are Wicca, Asatru, Druidry, or simply Paganism or Neo-Paganism,
just as a Christian can be Catholic, Presbyterian, or simply Christian. All
of these are somewhat different from each other. Because of this, the following
statements may not be true for every Pagan you encounter. However, there
are some practices that are generally common among Pagans; the employee can
tell you if his practices differ significantly from the following:
A Pagan employee will celebrate
a nature-based, polytheistic religion
A Pagan employee will hold
ethics emphasizing both personal freedom and personal
responsibility
Pagan ethics allow personal
freedom within a framework of personal responsibility. The primary basis
for Pagan ethics is the understanding that everything is interconnected,
that nothing exists alone, and that every action has a consequence. There
is no concept of forgiveness for sin in the Pagan ethical system; the
consequences of one's actions must be faced and reparations made as necessary
against anyone whom one has harmed. There are no arbitrary rules about moral
issues; instead, every action must be weighed against the awareness of what
harm it could cause.
Thus, for example, a Pagan
employee could consider consensual homosexuality a null issue morally because
it is an individual decision involving sharing love with another person.
Yet stealing would be wrong because it harms one's integrity and the business
environment, and causes the costs of the theft to be absorbed by innocent
consumers. The most common forms in which these ethics are stated are the
Wiccan Rede, "An it harm none, do as thou wilt," and in the Threefold Law,
"Whatsoever you do returns to you threefold."
A Pagan employee will hold
a paradigm that embraces plurality
Because Pagan religious systems
hold that theirs is a way among many, not the only road to
truth,and because Pagans revere a variety of Deities among their pantheons,
both male and female, a Pagan employee will believe that each person is free
to choose his or her own destiny, and will not believe in evangelizing or
proselytizing.
One advantage of this is that
a Pagan employee will thrive in a pluralistic environment, eager to support
an atmosphere that discourages discrimination based on differences such as
race or gender and encourages individuality, self-discovery and independent
thought. A Pagan employee is also likely to have knowledge of other religions;
most Pagans have explored other spirituality before deciding on their own.
Because Neo-Paganisms mainstream popularity is less than 50 years old,
few Pagans were born in the faith, but those who are were likely taught about
many religions as well; Pagan parents are adamant about not forcing their
beliefs on the child but rather teaching them and letting the child decide
when he is of age.
While a Pagan employee will
focus more on individual experience of the numinous than written dogma, she
will respect the sacred texts of other religions, but be unlikely to believe
them literally where they conflict with scientific theory or purport to be
the only truth.
A Pagan employee is likely
to enjoy reading, science, and helping professions
Margot Adler, National Public
Radio journalist, reported the results of a survey of Pagans in the 1989
edition of her book, Drawing Down the Moon. The results showed that
the one thing Pagans hold in common despite their differences is a voracious
appetite for reading and learning. Pagans also seem to be represented strongly
in the computer and health-care fields, so the Pagan employee is likely to
be computer-literate and highly effective in any helping profession.
Despite its sometimes-misunderstood
beliefs, Paganism is believed to be currently the fastest-growing religion,
and provides a satisfying spirituality to its practitioners. With the present
appreciation of diversity and tolerance in the business environment, more
people now understand that different cultural backgrounds bring perspectives
that can be valued instead of feared. It is our hope that as a manager or
human resources executive this will provide you with the information you
need to be able to facilitate understanding.
©1998 Cecylyna Dewr
Distribution is welcome; please include this notice.
For more information contact Pagan Pride Project
http://www.paganpride.org
(317) 916-9115.
PMB #119, 133 West Market Street,
Indianapolis, IN
46204-2801
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