|
Don't confuse AA with being a 'religion' |
Editorial
The two most important things America gave
the 20th century, author Kurt Vonnegut is reported to have said, are the blues
and Alcoholics Anonymous.
He's at least half right. Today AA, founded in 1935 by a New York stockbroker
and an Ohio proctologist both written off as hopeless drunks,
claims more than 2 million members. Unless you are involved with AA, or know
someone who is, you probably will be surprised to learn that AA holds more than
300 meetings a week on O'ahu.
Even more surprising, perhaps, AA doesn't want your money or even, unless you
know someone in need of its services, your attention. Its members want nothing
so much as to be able to extend to others what was so freely offered to them -
the gift of sobriety.
A disturbing threat to this organization and its friends has appeared, of all
places, in federal courts on the East Coast. In one ruling, a prison inmate
prevailed in his argument that he shouldn't be forced to attend AA meetings in
his facility because "AA is a religion." Of course, we can't constitutionally
force religion upon anyone in this country.
Ironically, AA doesn't force anyone to attend meetings.
In another ruling, testimony against a manslaughter defendant was thrown out
because his disclosures of wrongs to fellow members should be protected by "a
privilege granted to other religions similarly situated."
AA doesn't claim any such privilege.
The appeals court based its conclusion on "the religious nature of the 12 steps"
of Alcoholics Anonymous.
As anyone familiar with AA can tell you, and a careful reading of its literature
makes clear, AA is not religious. Neither, by the way, are the more than 200
other organizations that have adapted, with the permission of AA, the 12 steps:
Narcotics Anonymous, Overeaters Anonymous, Gamblers Anonymous and the like.
"The only requirement for membership," says AA's 3rd Tradition, "is a desire to
stop drinking." A wide assortment of atheists, agnostics and others have become
successful in AA.
Confusion arises, if that's what it is, because AA members are urged to develop
a relationship with a "higher power." The literature makes clear, however, that
"AA is not allied with any sect (or) denomination" and that a member's AA group
can serve as a suitable higher power.
How is the finding that AA is a religion a threat? The most immediate problem is
for judges, probation officers, treatment counselors and the like, who commonly
require troubled people in their care to attend AA meetings. Why? Because they
know that even if they don't try to follow the AA program, the meetings still
are likely to stabilize them to some extent and to plant the seeds for the
potential of a better life.
At some local AA meetings, literally dozens of the attendees are there not from
choice, but because some outside agency ordered them there. A legal finding that
AA is a "religion" means those agencies would have nowhere to send their
clients.
Not all of these clients get the message and improve their lives. But some do. A
Hawai'i court finding that AA is a "religion" thus would be a tragic mistake.
The Honolulu Advertiser© Monday, August 6, 2001
Return to the Magazines, Newspapers, etc. Page
Return to the A.A. History Page
Return to the West Baltimore Group Home Page