Denmark To Recognize Worshippers of Norse
Gods
Group will be allowed to conduct marriages
State church approves `indigenous religion'
By Jan M. Olsen, Toronto Star
ASSOCIATED PRESS 11/14/2003
COPENHAGEN-Denmark says it will let a group
that worships Thor, Odin and other Norse gods conduct legally recognized
marriages. "To me, it would be wrong if the indigenous religion of
this country wasn't recognized," Tove Fergo, the minister for
ecclesiastic affairs and a Lutheran priest, said this week.
Under Danish law, the state Evangelical Lutheran
Church has sole authority to recognize other religious communities.
The 240-member Forn Sidr, which worships Odin,
Thor, Freya and the other members of the Norse pantheon, sought
recognition in 1999, says Tissel Jacobsen, the group's president.
Last year, an ecclesiastic affairs panel
recommended that Forn Sidr, whose name means Old Custom in old Norse, be
approved, but only if their rituals were clearly detailed in its bylaws.
"At a general assembly, we added and
described our four annual heathen rituals - spring and fall equinoxes,
and the summer and winter solstices, and our marriage ceremony,"
Jacobsen says. "We then returned our application and the panel
approved it."
Fergo said she would give her final approval
"in a few days."
About 1,000 people worship the ancient gods in Denmark, Jacobsen says.
Since 1998, the panel of theology, law and history
scholars have advised the government on which groups seeking to become
religious communities should be recognized.
"It was not up to me to evaluate whether they
are telling the truth or the quality of their religion," Fergo
says. "Based on the commission's evaluation and what I have read, I
consider it a good religion."
Officially recognized religious communities can marry people and exempt
their members from the 1 per cent income tax that is imposed on members
of the state church.
People born in Denmark are automatically made
members of the state church, but can choose to leave it. Members of
other recognized religious communities, such Catholics, Muslims and
Jews, are also exempt from the tax.