Tennessee pastor organizes massive book burning
Rebekah Sager, Daily Kos Staff
Screenshot from Rev. Greg Locke's YouTube video of the event |
Book burning in Mount Juliet, Tennessee, at the Global Vision Bible Church led by Pastor Greg Locke.
When the Nazis began burning books in May 1933, they
claimed the books were “un-German.” Joseph Goebbels, “chief propagandist,”
delivered an incendiary speech claiming “No to decadence and moral
corruption!”
The Gleichschaltung, as it was called, was an
effort to cleanse German arts of culture that didn’t align with Nazi
ideology, focusing particularly on books by Jewish, liberal, and
leftist authors—a bellwether of censorship and control that
ultimately led to the murder of 6 million Jews.
Fast-forward to a Tennessee pastor who organized a book
burning with his congregation Wednesday, citing his church’s right
to "burn of cultic materials that they deem are a threat to their
religious rights and freedoms and belief system."
The event took place in Mount Juliet, Tennessee, at the
Global Vision Bible Church, which is led by the anti-vaxxer and extreme
right-wing conspiracy theorist Pastor Greg Locke.
Locke is a notorious anti-vaxxer and anti-masker. He’s has
called COVID-19 “nonsense” and the pandemic “fake,” according to Fox affiliate WZTV-Nashville.
As reported by Nashville Scene, Locke delivered a sermon before the burning,
directing parishioners to throw young adult titles such as J.K. Rowling's Harry
Potter and Stephanie Meyer's Twilight into a large
bonfire on the basis that the titles promote "witchcraft.”
”We have a constitutional right and a Biblical right to do what we're going to do tonight," Locke said. "We have a burn permit, but even without one a church has a religious right to burn occultic materials that they deem are a threat to their religious rights and freedoms and belief system."
The Nashville Scene also reported that one
counterprotester claimed that he threw a Bible into the fire while holding
tightly to copies of Fahrenheit 451 and On the Origin
of Species. Published in 1953, Ray Bradbury's novel Fahrenheit 451 depicts
a dystopian American future wherein books are outlawed, and
"firemen" are tasked with burning any books they find.
A local Mt. Juliet resident told Daily Kos that no one
should just brush this event off as just a “local church, local pastor.”
“Locke has over 2 million followers. He live-streamed the
Jan. 6 insurrection. He regularly tours the state with elected officials and
Roger Stone spoke at the church,” Sarah Moore tells DK. She adds, “It’s not
just Locke or Trump, but the people who support them who scare me.”
Locke threw himself into hellish hot water last week after
suggesting during a sermon that autism, epilepsy, and other mental health
disorders are actually demon possession.
A clip of Locke’s controversial sermon “Desperate for Deliverance”
went viral, and the comment section blew up by Christians and non-Christians
alike.
Locke’s book-burning party comes just a week after the
McMinn County, Tennessee, school board issued a statement defending its removal of Art Spiegelman’s Pulitzer Prize-winning Maus to teach eighth-graders about the
Holocaust.
A truly concerning number of conservatives have jumped on the train of trying
to get books banned from school and public libraries, if not outright calling for texts to
be burned. In addition to Tennessee, books have been
banned in the Granbury Independent School District in Texas
and pulled from shelves in Polk County, Florida.
“The McMinn County Board of Education voted to remove the
graphic novel Maus from McMinn County Schools because of its
unnecessary use of profanity and nudity and its depiction of violence and
suicide.”
Tennessee children live in a state with the tenth-highest teen birth rate of any state, the tenth-highest homicide mortality rate, the third-highest violent crime rate, and the ninth-highest
poverty rate.
But Locke is worried about witchcraft and the school
board is worried about profanity in a book about the world’s most horrific
examples of extremism.
“Orwellian” was one of the choice words
Spiegelman had to describe a Tennessee school board’s unanimous decision to ban Maus. “I’m kind of
baffled by this,” Spiegelman told CNBC, and “It’s leaving me with my jaw open,
like, ‘What?’”
We are all Spiegelman.
Just for the record, one of the books that was torched by
Nazis was by Helen Keller, an American author “whose belief in social justice
encouraged her to champion disabled persons, pacifism, improved conditions for
industrial workers, and women's voting rights,” the U.S. Holocaust Memorial
Museum writes.