When Confederate memorials began to be toppled in June, far-right organizations called for the destruction of the Satanic Temple’s bronze statue of Baphomet. Here’s why that doesn’t make sense.
Billy Anania
The Satanic Temple’s
bronze statue of Baphomet (image courtesy the Satanic Temple)
“Satanic Panic” never really ended; it just
fell out of fashion in mainstream media. With the rise of QAnon in Trump’s
America, however, Satanism has received renewed interest across the
conservative media spectrum. When the Black Lives Matter protests started
bringing down Confederate memorials in June, far-right publications and
organizations like The Washington Times and Turning Point USA called for the
destruction of the Satanic Temple’s bronze statue of Baphomet, its patron deity
with the head of a goat and angel wings.
These attempted takedowns betray long-held
Republican beliefs in freedom of religion and respect of private property,
leading Temple co-founder Lucien Greaves to denounce their legal and spiritual
corruption. In an open letter posted on his Patreon, Greaves critiqued the
false equivalence between Confederate monuments and the Baphomet statue,
arguing that Satanists pose no real threat to religious freedom, and that
Baphomet does not even currently stand on public property. (The statue is
currently housed in the Temple’s headquarters in Salem, Massachusetts.)
“You can really learn about people’s cultural baggage by seeing how
they react to the Baphomet monument,” Greaves told Hyperallergic. “It’s
interesting to think this debate could merely be about what’s offensive to some
type of individual, and that there is nothing qualitatively different about the
Baphomet statue — which is openly symbolic of pluralism, diversity, and
nonbinary identity.” (The Satanic Temple does not believe in the existence of
Satan, nor does it worship the occult.)
While the statue is based on a drawing by 19th-century cult
historian Éliphas Lévi, Baphomet’s folk history dates further back to the
Crusades, when members of the Knights Templar were charged with heresy for
allegedly cohabitating with Muslims. Scholars and archaeologists believe its
name to be a bastardization of Mohammed (i.e., Mahomet) that appeared in trial
transcripts. Baphomet was a symbol of gender nonconformity, sexual alterity,
and religious deviance well into the 20th century, becoming solidly associated
with modern Satanism after the Church of Satan created its sigil in the 1960s.
Unlike these artistic renderings, the Baphomet statue’s demeanor is
not inherently sinister — an aesthetic departure from the iconography of the
Church of Satan, which is unaffiliated with the Temple. Greaves and sculptor
Mark Porter intentionally designed its calm and stoic facial expression to
reflect the Temple’s non-violent mission and political status.
“People do not automatically think of Satanism as this murderous
force anymore,” Greaves said. “There has been a perceptual shift in which
people are able to embrace images that may have previously seemed untouchable
and blasphemous. As much as this is a religious and cultural movement, it is
also an art movement, and it all ties together.”
Much like the GOP’s fear-mongering around socialism, this new wave
of Satanic Panic is a form of projection. What many Christians really fear is
opposition to their notions of religious dominance, in both theory and
practice. The Satanic Temple’s core principles include peaceful protest,
adherence to science, body autonomy, and empathy toward all living beings. Many
of its local chapters perform rituals from a non-superstitious, non-supernatural
perspective while actively serving and beautifying their communities. They lead
cleanup efforts for parks and beaches, hold sock and clothing drives for
homeless communities, and distribute menstrual hygiene products for those
without access. The Baphomet statue is the embodiment of this new paradigm,
representing the only organization of its kind to gain political leverage in
recent history.
Conservative reactionaries have always needed
a scapegoat to blame for vice and deviance, and the Baphomet monument fills
that role. In reality, though, Satanists are helping to debunk pseudoscience
and organize against a theocratic status quo. It is no wonder, therefore, that
far-right internet trolls want to portray Satanists as cannibals working for the
deep state. Grieves views Baphomet as an entry point into the Temple’s efforts
to mitigate religious racism and combat white supremacy throughout the country.
“People are recognizing that there is a large group of Satanists
who do good work regardless of preconceived mythology and suspicion,” he said.
“And they will soon have to account for us.”
https://hyperallergic.com/587195/misunderstood-satanic-monument-baphomet-satanic-temple/?utm_campaign=Daily&utm_content=20200917&utm_medium=email&utm_source=Hyperallergic%20Newsletter
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