guardian.co.uk,
Paul Harris, Saturday 18 August 2012
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| The Mormon Tabernacle Choir singing in Salt Lake City in 2009. Photograph: George Frey/Getty Images |
They are
calling it the "Mormon moment". As Mitt Romney, a former Mormon
bishop as well as a former governor of Massachusetts, runs for the White House,
the transformation of Mormonism from persecuted and obscure frontier faith to
significant world religion seems complete.
If Romney
were to become president of the United States it would turn a practising and
devout Mormon into the most powerful man in the world. The mere fact of his
nomination run in the Republican party has already shone an intense media
spotlight on the faith and its spiritual home amid the valleys and high desert
mountains of Utah.
That
spotlight is uncovering a complex set of sensitivities and affiliations. Many
Mormons, while welcoming a chance to spread their beliefs, are deeply nervous
about all the attention. Their faith, founded in the 1830s in upstate New York,
was, after all, forced west by persecution and hatred.
"I am
torn. I love that people are talking about my religion," said Craig Janis,
a young Mormon professional sitting in a trendy coffee shop in downtown Salt
Lake City. "That's good for the church. But a lot of Mormons can be very
defensive. There is a persecution complex."
Whatever
the wishes of some, there is no stopping the conversation now. Mormonism is one
of the world's fastest growing religions and now has 14.4 million members. It
requires young members to serve abroad, giving it a 55,000-strong worldwide
missionary force at any one time.
With its
headquarters in Salt Lake City, Mormonism is rapidly becoming part of the US
mainstream. Democratic Senate leader Harry Reid is a Mormon. So is rightwing
firebrand Glenn Beck. The main hit show on Broadway is The Book of Mormon. In
some ways, a Romney presidency would just be the cherry on the cake. Many
compare it to John F Kennedy's 1960 presidential win, which marked a
breakthrough for Roman Catholics.
For Janis,
however, that would not be a welcome development. The young lawyer and
technology entrepreneur does not want to see a Romney presidency. Defying the
stereotype of Mormons as a politically homogenous group , Janis is both a
practising Mormon and a fervent Democrat. He has no time for Romney. "He
bends so far to the right," Janis said.
Nor is
Janis alone. Mormonism generally, with its keen focus on the family, is a
Republican stronghold: one recent survey showed 74% of Mormons are
Republican-leaning. But it is not a straightforward issue. "You are going
to get a much higher percentage of black Americans voting for Barack Obama than
you will Mormons voting for Romney," said Jeremy Lott, editor of the
website Real Clear Religion.
In Utah
last year, a state organisation was formed called LDS Democrats – the LDS
referring to the faith's full name, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day
Saints – and it has grown to 2,000 members. This year they will for the first
time travel to the Democratic party's national convention in Charlotte, North
Carolina, where Obama will be nominated for re-election.
Members of
the LDS Democrats are a broad political church. Social issues such as abortion
and gay marriage are part of the debate, but opposing them is not the disqualifier
that it might be in more liberal parts of America.
"We
want people who are socially conservative and who are socially liberal,"
said LDS Democrats' vice-chair Crystal Young-Otterstrom. With her young
daughter on her lap, she laughed as she described the group's mission in the
heart of Mormon country: "We are making converts, so to speak."
Democratic
Mormons like Janis and Young-Otterstrom are as religious as their Republican
counterparts. But they have drawn a different lesson from Mormonism's past and
theology.
They look
at its history of persecution – inspired largely by its early members'
embracing of polygamy – and its long, hard trek across the continent. In the
settlement and cultivation of the hard desert soil of Utah into a flourishing
state, they see the triumph of communal values. In the bustling modern
metropolis of Salt Lake City, and its many quiet, prosperous suburbs, they see
the fulfilment of Democratic values. After all it is a Mormon's religious duty
to relieve poverty.
"It is
a misnomer to believe that this valley was settled with rugged
individualism," said Steve Olsen, a former Mormon bishop, like Romney, and
author of a book aimed at Mormons, Why You May Be a Liberal (And That's Okay).
"It was settled with community spirit, unselfishness and people working
together."
Of course,
other Mormons disagree. Rather than opposing Romney from the left, they attack
him from the right. Examining the same Mormon history and theology, some see
Mormonism as a natural home for conservative libertarianism. The one thing
these groups agree on is that Romney would be a disaster. "I think Obama
is driving this country off a cliff at 100 mph. Romney would slow us down to
maybe 95," said Connor Boyack, who recently founded his own libertarian
thinktank in Utah. He too has a book out, Latter Day Liberty, in which he uses
Mormon scripture to espouse anti-big government beliefs. Sitting in Starbucks
in the Utah city of Orem – and, as a devout Mormon, scrupulously avoiding the
coffee – Boyack can't disguise his contempt for Romney. "I think he's
horrible. I say that without hesitation. As a person I am sure that he is a
good husband and father and a shrewd businessman. That's not a statement on his
character. It's a statement on his public policies. They are horrible," he
said.
Would he
vote for Romney? "Certainly not," he replied.
But perhaps
no one should be surprised that a more nuanced picture of the faith is emerging
as Mormonism emerges into the mainstream alongside Romney's presidential
campaign. After all, no community of millions of people can be a homogenous
bloc backing a co-religionist. Especially when it comes to Romney, who –
fearful of angering the Republican evangelical right – makes little reference
to his faith.
Yet
Mormonism has deep abiding characteristics that does unite members. Nearly all
Mormons have an overwhelming focus on family, believing the family unit to be
sacred and eternal. They believe it extends after death, hence the
controversial practice of baptising the dead. Salt Lake City and other
Mormon-heavy communities seem full to bursting with young couples with large
broods of children settled into suburban life. "About the one sort of cult
that the Mormons don't mind being called is a cult of the family," said
Lott.
This,
perhaps coupled with religious restrictions on caffeine and alcohol, appears to
have created a highly productive work ethic that has meant Utah has emerged as
an attractive place for companies to relocate. The centre of Salt Lake City has
sprouted new skyscrapers that tower over the delicate spires of the city's
Temple, the true spiritual home of the faith. It is also a tight-knit community
in which the church plays a huge role.
Tithing –
where a percentage of income is given to church charities – is very common.
Mormons are supported by an activist church, generous in its welfare programmes
and which provides a cheap higher education at Salt Lake City's Brigham Young
University: something debt-laden non-Mormon college students in America are
intensely envious of. All of that, coupled with its history of persecution, has
sometimes led to accusations of an insular culture whose self-reliance can be
seen as defensiveness. "Sometimes there is not a lot of love for Mormons
in the world," said Young-Otterstrom.
The rest of
America is certainly curious but not always kindly. The Mormon habit of wearing
sacred undergarments, which look a little like old-fashioned long-johns, has
become the butt of "magic underpants" jokes.
The
teachings of Mormonism are also likely to raise a few eyebrows as they become
better known. Mormonism describes a history in which Christ visits America and
in which Native Americans are the descendants of a lost tribe of Israel. Added
to that is the controversial history of the church, which saw founder Joseph
Smith murdered by a mob and which once discriminated against black people. In
the face of this, it is perhaps no surprise that Romney has rarely spoken of
his beliefs in terms of Mormonism, but rather in terms of devotion to Jesus. In
2007, before his first run for the Republican nomination, Romney sought to kill
the issue. He gave a heavily touted speech in which he said: "I believe in
my Mormon faith and I endeavour to live by it." But that was the only
moment in the speech he said the word "Mormon". And the 2012 campaign
has shown there is a huge difference between Romney's no-doubt-sincere private
commitment to Mormonism and his public one.
Despite
Romney's reticence, Mormonism is clearly growing in the collective
consciousness of an America that once sought bloodily to exterminate it. And
the church knows that the Romney run is an opportunity. "Mormonism is the
most ambitious religion that I have ever encountered. I think that the view of
the church when it comes to Romney's run is that it will be worth it, win or
lose," said Lott.
The church
has been assiduously preparing for the spotlight. Since 2010 it has spent
millions of dollars on a publicity campaign called "I am a Mormon"
that is aimed at highlighting the ordinary Americanness of its members.
Websites have been set up to counter myths – especially related to polygamy,
which the church banned more than a century ago.
Some local
congregations have been organising outreach sessions with non-Mormons, often in
states far away from Utah. And all the time the church is insisting that it
does not want to get involved in the rough and tumble world of US presidential
politics.
"We
hope our members will take the time to be informed on issues and candidates and
will participate in the political process," said Eric Hawkins, a senior
church spokesman. "However, how they choose to do this is a completely
private matter, and will not be directed by the church."
There is a
good reason for that. Mormonism's focus on the family led it to get involved in
the fight over gay marriage in California. That stance led gay activists to
picket and protest outside Mormon temples across America. Suddenly people who
are often known simply for being unnaturally nice and polite were being called
hate-mongers. It was a lesson in how mixing religion and politics can backfire
rapidly.
No wonder
the church refuses in 2012 to get involved even on behalf of one of its own.
"The church is strictly politically neutral and does not participate in
partisan politics by endorsing political candidates," Hawkins said. Those
conspiracy theorists who fear Romney is some sort of Mormon Manchurian
candidate have little supporting evidence.
As the
church grows it is likely to become more politically diverse. That is already
being shown by the recent successes of Mormon writer Joanna Brooks, whose 2012
autobiography The Book of Mormon Girl has been a huge critical success.
Brooks's story of her faith and avowed feminism has seen her appear on
everything from The Daily Show to Fox Business to NPR and the BBC.
Brooks has
shown that it is possible to be a religious Mormon and a feminist, just as
Boyack can mix his faith with libertarianism and Olsen can combine his with
being leftwing. Mormonism, despite its old image of bearded prophets leading
multiple wives through the wilderness, has always been flexible.
Indeed its
supreme adaptiveness is often cited as a reason for its position as America's
homegrown faith. When polygamy proved a political hurdle, the practice was
dumped. When civil rights arose and society changed, so too did the Mormon
attitude to race. Like so many American social movements, it ignored its past,
embraced the future and moved on. Many suspect it will eventually do that with
gay rights, its current millstone.
Janis hopes
so: "Gay rights is a very important thing to me. As a religious minority
myself, any threat to another minority and their ability to act according to
their conscience is a real problem for me."
Indeed,
when contemplating the prospect of a Mormon president in the shape of Romney,
Janis does not really see the future of the faith. Instead, he sees a
throwback: a conservative white male with rightwing opinions on everything from
attacking Iran to tax breaks for the rich to gay rights.
"I
remember the last time we had a Republican president in the shape of George W
Bush. He was the most unpopular person in the world. Having a Mormon as the new
most unpopular person in the world would worry me," he said.
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