Showing posts with label Pastafarian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pastafarian. Show all posts

Monday, January 02, 2023

European Court Again Holds That Flying Spaghetti Monster Church Is Not a Protected "Religion"

In two recent Chamber Judgments, the European Court of Human Rights reaffirmed its prior holding in a 2021 case that the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, whose adherents are also known as Pastafarians, does not qualify as a "religion" or "belief" protected by Article 9 of the European Convention on Human Rights. In Sager v. Austria, (ECHR, Dec. 15, 2022), Austria's Office for Religious Affairs refused to recognize the Church as a religious community. The European Court rejected petitioner's challenge to that decision, saying in part:

[B]y holding that Pastafarianism perceived itself as an ironical and critical movement with educational, scientific and political aims, and lacked religious rites, duties and an active following in Austria, the Office for Religious Affairs and the Federal Administrative Court duly applied the above‑mentioned standards requiring a certain level of cogency, seriousness, cohesion and importance.

In ALM v. Austria, (ECHR, Dec. 15, 2022), Austrian authorities refused to issue petitioner an identity card with a photograph showing him wearing a crown made of pasta.  Again, the European Court rejected petitioner's challenge to that decision. Law & Religion UK reports on the decisions.

Tuesday, March 02, 2021

Canadian Court Upholds Denial of Driver's License To Pastafarian Wearing Pirate's Hat

In Canada, in Smith v. British Columbia Human Rights Tribunal, (BC Sup. Ct., Feb. 26, 2021), a British Columbia trial court upheld the dismissal by the B.C. Human Rights Tribunal of a religious discrimination complaint filed by a member of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster. The province's driver's license authority had refused to issue petitioner a license using his photo that showed him wearing a pirate's tricorn hat. The Tribunal had said:

You are a Pastafarian and member of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster which mocks religious beliefs and certain religious practices.  Pastafarians wear colanders as “religious” head gear.

While the protection against discrimination on the ground of religion in the Code includes protecting the expression of non-belief and the refusal to participate in religious practice, the protection does not require accommodation of a practice satirizing religious practice in providing a service customarily available to the public.  It would not further the purposes of the Code to proceed with a complaint in these circumstances.

In refusing to overturn the Tribunal's decision, the court said in part:

The Tribunal determined that accepting the petitioner’s complaint for filing “would not further the purposes of the Code”, one of which is to “promote a climate of understanding and mutual respect where all people are equal in dignity and respect”.  In my view, the Tribunal’s Decision ... cannot be said to have been patently unreasonable.

Castanet reports on the decision.

Friday, August 17, 2018

Dutch High Court Rules Pastafarianism Is Not A Religion

The Guardian reported yesterday that Netherlands highest court, the Council of State, has ruled that law student Mienke de Wilde who is a Pastafarian cannot wear a colander on her head in her passport and drivers license photo. While Dutch law allows the head to be partially covered for such photos for genuine religious reasons, the court ruled that the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster lacks the seriousness and coherence required of a religion.  The court said:
It is important to be able to criticise religious dogma freely through satire but that does not make such criticism a serious religion.

Friday, August 04, 2017

German Court Says Church of Flying Spaghetti Monster Is Not a Religion

In Germany, a court in Frankfurt an der Oder has upheld a decision by the Infrastructure Ministry of Brandenburg to deny the Church of Flying Spaghetti Monster (FSM) a permit to put up signs announcing its religious services. As reported this week by The Vanguard, FSM contended that it should be able to erect road signs publicizing its "noodle masses" just as local Catholic and Protestant churches erect signs giving details of their worship services. However the court ruled that FSM is neither a religious community or a community with a common world view.

Friday, May 20, 2016

Polish Court Upholds Refusal To Recognize Pastafarians

Radio Poland reports that in Warsaw, Poland yesterday the Voivodship Administrative Court upheld the refusal by the Internal Affairs Ministry to list the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster in the register of religious denominations.  The court said that the Pastafarians still have the right to practice their religion, so neither the country's constitution nor international conventions were breached.  The church says it will appeal to the Supreme Administrative Court.

Wednesday, April 13, 2016

Court Says Flying Spaghetti Monster Is Not a "Religion"

In Cavanaugh v. Bartelt, (D NE, April 12, 2016), a Nebraska federal district court became one of the few to undertake a serious analysis of whether "FSMism"-- the doctrine of the Flying Spaghetti Monster whose followers are called "Pastafarians"-- qualifies as a "religion" for purposes of RLUIPA or the 1st Amendment.  In a suit by a prisoner seeking accommodation of his Pastafarian faith, the court (in a 16-page opinion) said:
The Court finds that FSMism is not a "religion" within the meaning of the relevant federal statutes and constitutional jurisprudence. It is, rather, a parody, intended to advance an argument about science, the evolution of life, and the place of religion in public education. Those are important issues, and FSMism contains a serious argument—but that does not mean that the trappings of the satire used to make that argument are entitled to protection as a "religion."
Later in the opinion, the court explained:
This case is difficult because FSMism, as a parody, is designed to look very much like a religion. Candidly, propositions from existing caselaw are not particularly well-suited for such a situation, because they developed to address more ad hoc creeds, not a comprehensive but plainly satirical doctrine. Nonetheless, it is evident to the Court that FSMism is not a belief system addressing "deep and imponderable" matters: it is, as explained above, a satirical rejoinder to a certain strain of religious argument.....
This is not a question of theology: it is a matter of basic reading comprehension. The FSM Gospel is plainly a work of satire, meant to entertain while making a pointed political statement. To read it as religious doctrine would be little different from grounding a "religious exercise" on any other work of fiction..... Of course, there are those who contend ... that the Bible or the Koran are just as fictional as those books. It is not always an easy line to draw. But there must be a line beyond which a practice is not "religious" simply because a plaintiff labels it as such. The Court concludes that FSMism is on the far side of that line.

Thursday, January 14, 2016

Russia Not Sympathetic To "Pastafarian" Driver's License Applicant

In Russia, the Moscow Department of the State Inspectorate of Traffic Safety has taken issue with one of its examination divisions which issued a driver's license to a man claiming to be a "Pastafarian."  According to Interfax, the Department says it will cancel the license which carries a photo of the man wearing a knitted pasta strainer on his head, and it will take disciplinary measures against the employees who issued the license. Rules apparently ban headwear in license photos.

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

New Zealand Approves Pastafarians To Perform Marriage Ceremonies

A Notice published in the Dec. 10 New Zealand Government Gazette approved the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster as an organization that qualifies under Sec. 9 of the Marriage Act 1955 to nominate persons to solemnize marriages.  To qualify under the statute, "one of the principal objects of the organisation" must be "to uphold or promote religious beliefs or philosophical or humanitarian convictions." The Freethinker reports on the decision to allow the group, whose followers are known as "Pastafarians" to perform wedding ceremonies. [Thanks to Paul de Mello for the lead.]

Thursday, January 09, 2014

Town Council Member Sworn In As First Open Pastafarian Office Holder

In Pomfret, New York last Friday, Christopher Schaeffer was sworn in as a member of the Town Council wearing a pasta colander on his head-- the traditional headgear of the satirical Pastafarian movement. Gawker reports that this is the first open member of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster to be sworn into public office. Schaeffer told a local newspaper: "It's just a statement about religious freedom. It's a religion without any dogma." [Thanks to Arthur Spitzer for the lead.]